(1460.1) HolinshedHist. Scotl. II. 89 "Such coisterels and other as remained with the Scotish cariage, seeing the discomfiture of their aduersaries, ran foorth and pursued them into those marishes. (1460)"

(1469.1) Househ. Ord. (1790) 93 "To see the remaines hadde into the lardre, and the lardener to be charged with it. (1469)"

(1472.1) Plumpton Corr. (Camden) 26 "One Richard of the Burgh, that had take and led away feloniously certaine ky and other cattell..was take and arested with the said manor att Spofford, whearat they yett remaine. (1472)"

(1526.1) Househ. Ord. (1790) 157 "One of the groomes..to carry to the chaundrie all the remaine of morters, torches, quarries, pricketts. (1526)"

(1528.1) LyndesayDreme 360 "That was the Lymbe, in the quhilk did remaine Our Fore-fatheris, because Adam offendit. (1528)"

(1528.2) PerkinsProfit. Bk. v. &sect.326 (1642) 144 "If a man seised of three acres..enfeoffeth a stranger..of two of the three acres..and the wife is endowed of the third acre which remaineth as allowance of the other acres. (1528)"

(1528.3) TindaleDoctr. Treat. (1848) 301 "By the reason of original sin, or *birth-poison, that remaineth in him. (1528)"

(1533.1) MoreApol. xxii. Wks. 882/2 "A great some remaining after al the spiritual folke sufficiently prouided for, then had it bene good that he hadde yet farther deuysed, how it would please him that his discretes should order the remanaunt. (1533)"

(1536.1) Statutes Irel. 28 Hen. VIII (Bolton, 1621, 108) "The writings obligatorie or money taken for the same shall rest, remaine, and abide in the hands of the underthesaurer, or in the Hanaper of the kings Chauncerie in Ireland. (1536)"

(1540.3) Househ. Ord. Hen. VIII in Thynne's Animadv. Introd. 35 "The Clerkes-Comptrollers to goe with him to take the said Remaines to be advouched with him, what the expence shall rise to. Item..the Booke of Comptrollment..shall be put yearly into the Exchequer, to be advoucht to the Cofferers account. (1540)"

(1542.4) UdallErasm. Apoph. 302 "Onely Phocion was remainyng unserved by reason that the poison had been all consumed by the others. (1542)"

(1542.5) UdallErasm. Apoph. 206 "The deformitee and disfigure of hymping on the one legge..did still remain. (1542)"

(1542.6) WyattPoems, `Unstable Dream' 13 "Where it was at wysshe it could not remain. (1542)"

(1542.7) Wyatt in Tottel's Misc. (Arb.) 71, "I was content thy seruant to remain; And not to be repayed after this fashion. (1542)"

(1543.1) transl. Act 13 Edw. I, c. 2 "If he that repleuied make defaut agayne, or for an other cause retourne of the dystres beyng now twyse repleuied be awarded, the distres shal remaine irrepleuiable. (1543)"

(1544.1) Extracts Aberd. Reg. 193 "For furnesing of ane thowsand horse to remain with the locumtenant on the bordouris, for resisting of our auld ennimeis of Ingland. (1544)"

(1544.3) tr. Littleton's Tenures (1574) 13 "Yf a man let landes..for terme of yeres, the remainder ouer to an other for terme of lyfe. (1544)"

(1544.4) tr. Littleton's Tenures (1574) 95 b, "If a lease bee made to a man for terme of life, the remaynder unto another for terme of life, the remaynder unto the thirde in taile, the remainder unto the fourth in fee [etc.]. (1544)"

(1545.1) JoyeExp. Dan. x. 169 b, "It behowued not one stone vpon another nor vestigie of the temple to stand and remaine. (1545)"

(1548.7) Udall, etc. Erasm. Par. John vi. 41 b, "Where as all men did eat therof, they neuertheles dyed, nether did any one of so great a number remain vndead. (1548)"

(1548.8) Udall, etc. Erasm. Par. Luke xxii, "Tempering his woordes to the rawnesse of his disciples, which rawenes he suffred..to remaine a long season in them. (1548)"

(1549.1) Cranmer in Strype Life App. xl, "Vigils, otherwise called Watchings, remain in the Calendars upon certain Saints' Evens. (1549)"

(1549.2) Paget in Froude Hist. Eng. (1860) V. 182 "Send for all the council that be remaining unsent abroad. (1549)"

(1549.3) Act 3 &amp. 4 Edw. VI, c. 1 &sect.2 "The said Offices have remained void for a long Time, to the great Let of Justice. (1549)"

(1550.1) CranmerWks. (Parker Soc.) I. 6 "But what availeth it to take away beads, pardons, pilgrimages, and such other like popery, so long as two chief roots remain unpulled up? " (1550)"

(1550.2) Disc. Common Weal Eng. (1893) 76 "Therof to this daie remaineth these vocables of coine, as libra, pondo, dipondium,..vocables of weight; that afterward weare gyven to coines pretending the same weight. (1550)"

(1551.1) RecordePathway to Knowl. ii. Introd., "And if you abate euen portions from things that are equal, those partes that remain shall be equall also. (1551)"

(1551.2) T. WilsonLogike 76 "There remaineth a wicked inclination, the same must alwaies be brideled and kept in, even with the terror of the law, as though it were a mouse-roll. (1551)"

(1553.1) S. CabotOrdinances in Hakluyt Voy. (1589) 259 "To put the same into a common leger to remain of record for the companie. (1553)"

(1553-87.1) FoxeA. &amp. M. (1596) 51/1 "The celebration of Easterdaie remained adiaphoron, as a thing indifferent in the church. (1553-"

(1555.1) EdenDecades (Arb.) 285 "What parts of the baul of the earth remained yet vndiscouered. (1555)"

(1555.2) RidleyWks. (Parker Soc.) 34 "Saying: `We grant the nature of bread remaineth..and yet the corporeal substance of the bread therefore is gone, lest two bodies should be confused together, and Christ should be thought impanate'. (1555)"

(1558.3) Warde tr. Alexis' Secr. i. 45 "Take..Ambergryse,..Styrax calamita, [etc.]..And the Ambre, Styrax, and other thinges that remaine in the bottome of the sayd vessel,..will be excedinge good to make muske or swete balles. (1558)"

(1558.4) Warde tr. Alexis' Secr. (1568) 110 b, "Thinges that remain in the fire without melting, wherein men print very well all maner of metall. (1558)"

(1558.5) in Feuillerat Revels Q. Eliz. (1908) Table i, "The Master and officers..shall..peruse the remaines of the whole stuffe and other stoare lefte at the laste vewe. (1558)"

(1559.2) MorwyngEvonym. 376 "Pres it out strongly and put the decoction prest out through a wullen sight, and pres it out, that the substance may remaine in the sight. (1559)"

(1559.3) National Covt. in Knox Hist. Ref. ii. 313 "Item the sayd Lords of the congregation and all the members therof shall remaine obedient subiects to our soueraigne Lord and Ladies authoritie. Item the said congregation nor none of them shall not trouble or molest a Church-man. (1559)"

(1561.2) T. N[orton]Calvin's Inst., "It remaineth that by applyance all the same [benefits] may come to us. (1561)"

(1561.3) T. NortonCalvin's Inst. i. 52 "Although we graunt that the Image of God was not altogether defaced and blotted out in him, yet was it so corrupted, that all that remaineth, is but vggly deformitie. (1561)"

(1563.7) in W. Nicolson Leges Marchiarum (1705) 138 "If it shall happen the Cattel or Sheep of the one Realm to be *staff-herded, or to remain depasturing upon the ground of the opposite Realm. (1563)"

(1563-87.1) FoxeA. &amp. M. (1596) 936/2 "He remained so long manicled that his haire was folded togither. (1563-"

(1563-87.2) FoxeA. &amp. M. (1596) 936/2 "He remained so long manicled that his haire was folded togither. (1563-"

(1565.1) CalfhillAnsw. Treat. Crosse (1846) 153 "The same divine nature, after the assumpting of flesh, to remain notwithstanding incircumscriptible. (1565)"

(1565.3) HardingConfut. Apol. iv. 212 b, "They can not be the..shining church of Christ... Wherefore it remaineth that it is the synagog of Antichrist, and Lucifer. (1565)"

(1565.4) JewelRepl. Harding (1611) 391 "There be certaine men, that..fearing, that if they attaine to any knowledge, they shall be proud: and so they remaine still only in Milke [tr. Augustine: et remanent in solo lacte]. (1565)"

(1567.4) Q. Eliz.Let. to Throgmorton in Robertson Hist. Scot. (1759) II. App. 47 "We..cannot but think them to have therein gone so far beyond the duty of subjects, as must needs remain to their perpetual touche for ever. (1567)"

(1571.2) CampionHist. Irel. II. viii. (1633) 102 "For which cause the Earle of Desmond remained many yeares Deputy to George Duke of Clarence his god-brother. (1571)"

(1572.1) BossewellArmorie ii. 94 "A great Parke..that had remained vnhunted, duringe the time of foure mens ages. (1572)"

(1572.2) GascoigneCounc. to B. Withipoll 7 "Beleeue me now it is a friendly touch, To vse fewe words where friendship doth remaine. (1572)"

(1572.3) MascallPlant. &amp. Graff. v. (1592) 28 "But alwayes take good heede to the binding of your heds that they waxe slack, or shagge, neyther on the one side or other, but remaine fast vpon the clay. (1572)"

(1572.4) PlatFloures Philos. Addr. to Rdr., "The Iohn so sweete in shewe and smell, distincte by colours twaine, Aboute the borders of their beds in seemelie sighte remaine. (1572)"

(1573.1) NorthbrookePoore Mans Gard. To Rdr., "The Earth then remained to man as a thing tillable. (1573)"

(1573-80.1) TusserHusb. (1878) 59 "Make hillocks of molehils, in field thorough out, and so to remaine, till the yeere go about. (1573-"

(1574.1) HellowesGueuara's Ep. (1577) 354 "If we sinke not to the bottome, at the leaste we remaine all bemyred. (1574)"

(1574.2) NewtonHealth Mag. 8 "The matter..which remained in the fleshe might be extenued. (1574)"

(1575.1) Fenton (title), "Golden Epistles, contayning varietie of discourse, both morall, philosophicall, and divine, gathered as well out of the remainder of Guevaraes workes, and other authors. (1575)"

(1575.2) GascoigneFlowers Wks. 1907 I. 109 "The meanes to single forth The stricken Deare which doth in heard remaine. (1575)"

(1575.3) in W. H. Turner Select. Rec. Oxford (1880) 367 "To remaine as a perpetuall memory and record of such orders. (1575)"

(1575.4) tr. Luther's Galat. iii. 1 "The slimy Body and the Remnants of Sin remain still in us. (1575)"

(1576.1) BakerJewell of Health 161 b, "When as in it shall no other be contayned or remaine then the excrementes of the sage. (1576)"

(1576.2) FlemingPanopl. Epist. 67, "I suppose that al your sorrow cannot with such facilitie be supplanted, but that a few sparkles wil remaine. (1576)"

(1576.3) Fleming tr. Caius' Dogs 33 "It remaineth that we deliuer vnto you the Dogges of a mungrell or currishe kind. (1576)"

(1576.4) FlemingPanopl. Epist. 68 "So would I have you thinke mee to be, at this present, and for ever hereafter to remaine. (1576)"

(1577.6) GrindalLet. Wks. (1843) 395 "By that occasion my appearance was respited; and I now remain as a man in suspense. (1577)"

(1577.7) HarrisonEngland ii. iii. (1877) i. 87 "The students also that remaine in them, are called hostelers or halliers. Hereof it came of late to passe, that..Thomas late arch&dubh.bishop of Canturburie, being brought vp at such an house at Cambridge, was of the ignorant sort of Londoners called an `hosteler', supposing that he had serued..in the stable. (1577)"

(1577.9) HarrisonEngland iii. viii. (1878) ii. 57 "Notwithstanding that they haue remained there vnset by the space of fortie dais and more: yet some [saffron heads]..haue brought foorth two or three floures a peece. (1577)"

(1577.10) HanmerAnc. Eccl. Hist., Euseb. i. vi. (1663) 7 "It remaineth that we begin after a compendious sort from the coming of our Saviour Christ in the Flesh. (1577)"

(1577.11) F. de L'isle's Legendarie G iv, "Fiue of them came short home, and the most doulte of all remained behinde. (1577)"

(1579.15) W. WilkinsonConfut. Family of Love, Heret. Affirm. b b, "Not that they should alwayes remaine as subject thereunder. (1579)"

(1579.16) W. WilkinsonConfut. Familye of Loue, Heret. Affirm. b j b, "Not that they should alwayes remaine as subject thereunder [the ordinance of the Lord], but vntill the appoynted tyme, vntill the manly old age in the godly vnderstanding of the holy word. (1579)"

(1581.4) MulcasterPositions viii. (1887) 51 "Would any man beleue it,..that one Milo so strutted himselfe, so pitcht his feet, so peysed his bodie, as he remained vnremoueable from his place, being haled at..by a number of people. (1581)"

(1581.6) W. BlandyCast. Policy 18 b, "Captayne, Lieutenent, Auncient, Serieant of a Company, gentleman in a company or of the Rounde, Lance passado. These are speciall; the other that remaine, priuate or common Souldiars. (1581)"

(1582.2) N. Lichefield tr. Castanheda's Conq. E. Ind. i. lxv. 132 b, "That you shoulde understand, wherefore and for what cause I remained in the Indias, for that it is possible that all you do not know. (1582)"

(1587.1) GoldingDe Mornay, Pref. 8 "Those common and generall Insets haue remained barren in the most part of men. (1587)"

(1587.2) GarrardArte Warre (1591) 236 "Such..as bring wares to the campe, he [the High Marshall of the Field] must take order that they be courteously..vsed..procuring them a conuoy..to the intent they may..remaine..satisfied, without suspect of being robbed..of theeues and flibutors. (1587)"

(1587.3) HarrisonEngland ii. ii. (1877) i. 87 "The students also that remaine in them [Oxford hostels or halls] are called hostelers or halliers. (1587)"

(1587.4) in Cath. Rec. Soc. Publ. V. 140 "The young king of Scotland remaineth still amongst his..ennemies, who suffer him to take his pastime..under a shew of liberty, but they think themselves sure ynough of him. (1587)"

(1590.11) WestSymbol. i. ii. &sect.311 "An Instrument of Surrender is an instrument testifiyng..that the particuler tenant of landes..doth..agree, that he which hath the next immediate remainder or reuersion thereof shall also haue the particuler estate of the same in possession. (1590)"

(1591.1) GreeneFarew. Folly Wks. (Grosart) IX. 324 "Yet remaines there in the minde certain Scyntillul&ae.aeig; voluptatis, which confirmed by a saturnall impression, were harder to root out than were they newly sprong vp in youth. (1591)"

(1593.10) Shaks.Lucr. 1452 "Her cheeks with chaps and wrinkles were disguised; Of what she was no semblance did remain. (1593)"

(1594.1) BlundevilExerc. vii. ix. (1636) 661 "Adde to the yeere of the Lord given 3, and divide the product thereof by 15, and the remainder shall be the number of the said Indiction. (1594)"

(1594.2) BlundevilExerc. i. vii. (1636) 25 "But such [numbers] as cannot bee divided but that there will remaine some odde unite, those are called Primes. (1594)"

(1594.3) BlundevilExerc. i. vii. (ed. 7) 25 "Such numbers as may be evenly divided by another number without leaving any remainder, are called Compounds. (1594)"

(1594.4) BlundevilExerc. i. v. (1636) 14 "The third number is called the Quotient,..and the fourth number is called the Remainder, if any be. (1594)"

(1594.5) BlundevilExerc. l. 176 b, "There will remaine 9. houres 4&p.8. which is the length of the artificiall day, when the Sunne is in the first degree of Scorpio, the one halfe wherof is called the semi-diurnall Arke of that artificial day. (1594)"

(1594.6) BlundevilExerc. i. iii. (1636) 8 "Then I say take 10 out of 17 and there remaineth 7, which I set downe. (1594)"

(1597.12) SkeneDe Verb. Sign. s.v. Annuel, "Top-annuel, is ane certaine duty, given and disponed furth of ony bigged tenement or land, of the quhilk tenement the propertie remainis with the disponer, and he is onely oblished to pay the said annuel. (1597)"

(1597.13) in St. Papers, Dom. 360 "There remain 70 ships of all sorts: six Levantiscoes. (1597)"

(1597-8.1) BaconEss., Faction (Arb.) 78 "When one of the Factions is extinguished, the remaining subdiuideth. (1597-"

(1598.1) BarckleyFelic. Man (1631) 635 "A faithfull friend is hard to be found; the bare name onely remaineth; the thing is obsolet and growne out of use. (1598)"

(1598.7) StowSurv. 361 "Part of the ruines of the old Temple were seene to remaine builded of Cane stone. (1598)"

(1599.1) Hayward1st Pt. Life &amp. Reign Hen. IV 4 "Neither did the continuance of his Raigne bring him to a proude port and stately esteeming of himselfe, but in his latter yeares he remained so gentle and faire in cariage, that [etc.]. (1599)"

(1599.2) MinsheuSpan. Gram. 20 "Now it remaineth to giue a Paradigma or example of euery Coniugation of their Moodes. (1599)"

(1601.15) Shaks.All's Well iv. iii. 272 "Not that I am afraide to dye, but that my offences beeing many, I would repent out the remainder of Nature. (1601)"

(1601.16) Shaks.All's Well iv. iii. 313 "Sir, for a Cardecue, he will sell the fee-simple of his saluation, the inheritance of it, and cut th'intaile from all remainders, and a perpetuall succession for it perpetually. (1601)"

(1603.2) HollandPlutarch's Mor. 794 "The combat remained unatchived and unperfect, neither had it a certaine and doubtlesse conclusion. (1603)"

(1603.3) HollandPlutarch's Mor. 1143 "Pythia the Priestresse of Apollo, being once come downe from her three footed fabricke, upon which she receiveth that incentive spirit of furie, remaineth quiet. (1603)"

(1603.5) HollandPlutarch's Mor. 558 "The wales, marks, scarres and cicatrices of sinne and vice remaine to be seene. (1603)"

(1603.6) HollandPlutarch's Mor. 223 (R.) "Many men do let their fortunes run (as it were through a colander or strainer, wherein the worst stick and remaine in the way behind, whiles the better do passe and run out. (1603)"

(1603.7) KnollesHist. Turks (1621) 268 "The Bassa..began..with fire and sword to wast that part of the countrey which yet remained vnspoiled. (1603)"

(1604.4) E. G[rimstone]D'Acosta's Hist. Indies iii. xv. 169 "But now that we have left the sea, let vs come to other kinde of waters that remaine to be spoken of. (1604)"

(1604.5) E. G[rimstone]D'Acosta's Hist. Indies iv. xii. 244 "They put all the mettall into a cloth, which they straine out,..and the rest remaines as a loafe of silver. (1604)"

(1604.6) E. G[rimstone]D'Acosta's Hist. Indies iv. xii. 245 "They put all the mettall into a cloth, which they straine out very forcibly, so as all the quicke-silver passeth out..and the rest remaines as a loafe of silver, like to a marke of almonds pressed to draw oyle. And being thus pressed, the remainder containes but the sixt part in silver, and five in mercurie... Of these markes they makes pinnes, (as they call them,) like pine apples, or sugar loaves, hollow within, the which they commonly make of a hundred pound weight. (1604)"

(1604.8) Merch. New-Royall Exchange B ij b, "The Merchants [at Rouen]..shall chuse out of the said number three officers, viz. A Prior and two Consulls, to remaine in their authoritie for one yeare. (1604)"

(1605.1) A. WottonAnsw. late Popish Art. Ded., "All that remaines is by this, or some such like deed, to professe my sensiblenes of your great fauour. (1605)"

(1605.2) BaconAdv. Learn. ii. fol. 9 "The Sunne..passeth through pollutions, and it selfe remaines as pure as before. (1605)"

(1605.3) MontgomerieFlyting 443 "Whan thae dames deuoutly had done their devore..Of that matter to make remained no more. (1605)"

(1605.5) Shaks.Lear ii. i. 59 "Let him fly farre: Not in this Land shall he remaine vncaught. (1605)"

(1605.6) SalternAnt. Laws Gt. Brit. E 2 b, "The Saxons..called their Nobles by a name of the same signification, viz. Earles or eldermen, a name of nobilitie vnknowne in their owne Countrie; where (as I take it) they are called Graues or Greues, signifying a gouernor, which name also they brought hither, and it remaineth in some vse to this day. (1605)"

(1605.11) VersteganDec. Intell. iv. 91 "The redeemer of the remainder of the captiue Troyans that were in Greece. (1605)"

(1605.12) VersteganDec. Intell. iii. (1628) 63 "Aduanced to the honourable titles of Earles and Lords, with Establishment for the continuall remaining of these titles. (1605)"

(1605.13) VersteganDec. Intell. v. (1628) 137 "There remaines yet a tole called *Guid-law, which is paid for cattell at Bowdumbar, a Gate of the City so called, and was first granted for the payment of guides. (1605)"

(1605.14) VersteganDec. Intell. iv. (1636) 100 "This coniuncture to haue remained for some space after the great and generall deluge. (1605)"

(1607.17) Shaks.Cor. ii. iii. 148 "The Tribunes endue you with the Peoples Voyce, Remaines, that in th'Officiall Markes inuested, You anon doe meet the Senate. (1607)"

(1607.18) Shaks.Timon iii. vi. 39, "I hope it remaines not vnkindely with your Lordship, that I return'd you an empty Messenger. (1607)"

(1607.19) TopsellFour-f. Beasts 137 "Their common properties of nature, such as..remaine like infallible and invariable truths in euery kinde and country of the world. (1607)"

(1607.20) TopsellFour-f. Beasts (1658) 329 "To cure a wound made with harquebush-shot... First seek with an instrument whether the pellet remain within or not. (1607)"

(1607.21) TopsellFour-f. Beasts 669 "That a Bore or male swine wil not remaine of validity and good for breed past three yeare old. (1607)"

(1607.22) TopsellFour-f. Beasts 415 "It will ranckle worse, by reason of the flaw of yron remaining in the flesh. (1607)"

(1607.23) TopsellSerpents (1653) 639 "It remaineth to discourse of the Politick, Ethical, and Oeconomick vertues and properties of them [bees]. (1607)"

(1607.24) TopsellFour-f. Beasts (1673) 435 "If they [Asses] do not breed..before the casting of their Colts-teeth, they remain steril..all their life. (1607)"

(1607.25) TopsellFour-f. Beasts 124 "If they remaine abroad in the aire,..they grow as light as any vanishing or softer substance. (1607)"

(1607.26) T. Rogers 39 Art. xxviii. (1633) 176 "The Metusiastes and Papists..beleeue the substance of Bread and Wine is so changed into the substance of Christ his Body, as nothing remaineth but the reall Body of Christ, besides the accidents of Bread and Wine. (1607)"

(1608.1) Bp. HallEpist. i. vi. 284, "I haue noted foure ranks of commonly-named Miracles: from which, if you make a iust subduction, how few of our wonders shall remaine either to beleefe or admiration! " (1608)"

(1610.1) GuillimHeraldrie ii. iii. 42 "Adumbration, or Transparency, is a cleere exemption of the substance of the Charge, or thing borne, in such sort as that there remaineth nothing thereof to be discerned, but the naked and bare proportion of the outward lineaments thereof. (1610)"

(1610.2) GuillimHeraldry ii. iii. 42 "Adumbration or Transparency is a cleere exemption of the substance of the Charge..in such sort, as that there remaineth nothing thereof to be discerned, but the..bare proportion of the outward lineaments thereof. (1610)"

(1610.3) GwillimHeraldry (1660) i. iii. 15 "I call those notes or marks, Accidents of Armes, that..may be annexed unto them, or taken from them, their substance still remaining. (1610)"

(1611.16) SpeedHist. Gt. Brit. v. iii. &sect.22. 18 "By which account the great supposed antiquity of Brute, is now lessened by seuen hundred fiftie and two yeares; and the time so scantelized betwixt his and Cesars entrance, that two hundred forty six yeares onely remaine. (1611)"

(1611.17) Shaks.Cymb. ii. iv. 2, "I would I were so sure To winne the King, as I am bold, her Honour Will remaine her's. (1611)"

(1611.23) Shaks.Wint. T. ii. i. 51 "He ha's discouer'd my Designe, and I Remaine a pinch'd Thing; yea, a very Trick For them to play at will. (1611)"

(1611.24) SpeedHist. Gr. Brit. vii. xlv. &sect.13. 371 "The remembrance of which field is retained vnto this day, by certaine small Hilles there remaining, whence haue beene digged the bones of men, Armour, and the water-chaines of horse-bridles. (1611)"

(1611.32) Panegyr. Verses in Coryat's Crudities, "For he would not Take orders but remaine an Idiote. (1611)"

(1612.1) BenvenutoPassenger's Dialogues, Ital. &amp. Eng. (Nares) "Specially, when wee would abstergifie, and that the huske remaine behind in the boyling of it. (1612)"

(1612.2) BrerewoodLang. &amp. Relig. (1614) 94 "It is alleaged that the word Tatari, or Totari, (for so indeed they are rightly called, as learned men obserue, and not Tartari) signifieth in the Syriaque and Hebrew tongues, a Residue or Remainder such as these Tartars are supposed to bee of the Ten Tribes. (1612)"

(1612.3) ColsonGen. Treas., Art Arithm. B bb 2 b, "Of Substraction... The first number is to be called the Maior, grosse sum, sum total, or superior number... The second is named the Minor... The third is called the Remainer. (1612)"

(1612.4) DraytonPoly-olb. ix. 14 "A constant Mayden still she onely did remaine, The last her genuine lawes which stoutly did retaine. (1612)"

(1614.2) RaleighHist. World ii. 312 "His Sepulchre remained in S. Hierome's time, and over it the Sunne engraven. (1614)"

(1614.3) RaleighHist. World &sect.5. 40 "Or if the soile and seate had not remained, then would not Moses, who wrote of Paradise about 850 years after the floud, haue described it so particularly. (1614)"

(1614.4) SeldenTitles Hon. 286 "Thanes remained as a distinct name of dignitie, and vanisht not at the innouation of new honors. (1614)"

(1615.8) G. SandysTrav. iv. 274 "Passing by Ciceros Villa, euen at this day so called, where yet do remaine the ruines of his Academy. (1615)"

(1615.9) G. SandysRelation III. 153 "On the twentieth of March with the rising Sunne we departed. A small remainder of that great Caruan; the Nostraines (so name they the Christians of the East) that rid vpon Mules and Asses being gone before. (1615)"

(1615.10) G. SandysTrav. 227 "To be conueyed by him vnto the Lazaretta, there to remaine for thirtie or fortie dayes before I could be admitted into the Citie. (1615)"

(1615.11) G. SandysTrav. 77 "Whose posterity in part remaineth to this day, though vassaled to the often changes of forraine Governours. (1615)"

(1615.12) J. Chamberlain in Crt. &amp. Times Jas. I (1848) I. 362 "The place of Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports hath..remained in the lord chamberlain's hands as *in deposito. (1615)"

(1615.13) LathamFalconry (1633) Words Art expl., "Pill, and pelfe of a fowle, is that refuse and broken remains which are left after the Hawke hath been relieued. (1615)"

(1617.2) MorysonItin. ii. 100 "Two things remained to settle the Kingdome. First the ridding Ireland of the Swordmen. (1617)"

(1617.3) MorysonItin. ii. iii. i. 213 "The remainder can hardly beare such deminution, as all Armies are subiect vnto. (1617)"

(1617.4) MorysonItin. ii. 202 "Don Iean and the remaine of the Spaniards at Kinsale, were all embarked ready to be gone. (1617)"

(1617.5) MorysonItin. i. 37 "After they had fined me some cannes of wine, and..had made me free, it remained that he whom they had chosen to be my God-father,..should instruct me with some precepts. (1617)"

(1618.1) Hist. P. Warbeck in Select. Harl. Misc. (1793) 70 "Loth to remain amongst such distrustful enemies, he quietly returned to his most assured friend, the lady Margaret. (1618)"

(1618.2) in Capt. Smith Wks. (Arb.) 541 "There are so many sofisticating Tobaco-mungers in England, were it neuer so bad, they would sell it for Verinas, and the trash that remaineth should be Virginia. (1618)"

(1618.3) in Capt. Smith Wks. (Arb.) 541 "There are so many sofisticating Tobaco-mungers in England, were it neuer so bad, they would sell it for Verinas, and the trash that remaineth should be Virginia. (1618)"

(1622.2) DonneSerm. i. 5 "He that comes alive out of that field [a duel] comes a dead man, because he comes a deadly sinner, and he that remains dead in the field is gone to an everlasting death. (1622)"

(1622.3) FletcherLove's Cure iii. ii, "Be there but one spark Of fire remaining in him unextinct, With my discourse I'll blow it to a flame. (1622)"

(1623.2) GougeSerm. Extent God's Provid. &sect.15 "The Coroner and his Inquest comming to view the bodies, found remaining but 63. (1623)"

(1623.3) GougeSerm. Extent God's Provid. &sect.15 "The Coroner and his Inquest comming to view the bodies, found remaining but 63. (1623)"

(1623.4) J. JohnsonArith. i. C 1, "The proofe of Addition is made by Subtraction; for if you subtract the numbers which you added from the totall of the Addition, there will remaine nothing, if the worke be truly done. (1623)"

(1623.6) W. L'IsleSax. Treat. conc. Old &amp. New Test. f. e 3, "I meane ere long to let the world know what is more remaining; as more I have seene both in our Universitie Libraries, and that of Sir Robert Cotton. (1623)"

(1623.7) tr. Favine's Theat. Hon. iii. vi. 374 "That the Order may remaine pure and vndefamed, according as it ought to doe. (1623)"

(1624.2) Capt. SmithVirginia ii. 29 "The groutes and peeces of the cornes remaining, by fanning..away the branne, they boyle 3 or 4 houres with water. (1624)"

(1624.3) Capt. SmithVirginia (1629) 212 "Such like as they spare of the remainings. (1624)"

(1624.4) DarcieBirth of Heresies xxii. 104 "The body it self of the planetall Sunne remaines and continues in his sphericall Orbe. (1624)"

(1624.5) F. WhiteRepl. Fisher 421 "In Transubstantiation the matter is destroyed, and the quantitie and accidents remaine, and in Transelementation the matter remaineth, and the essentiall and accidentall formes are altered. (1624)"

(1624.6) GatakerTransubst. 107 "Under them all and each particle of them undevidedly remaining. (1624)"

(1624.7) GatakerTransubst. 173 "The accidents of bread and wine remaine without actuall inhering and being in their naturall subject. (1624)"

(1624.8) WottonArchit. i. ad fin., "I will conclude the first Part of my present Travel. The second remaineth concerning Ornaments. (1624)"

(1625.1) BaconEss., Truth (Arb.) 499 "And though the Sects of Philosophers of that Kinde be gone, yet there remaine certaine discoursing Wits. (1625)"

(1625.2) Bp. MountaguApp. C&ae.aeig;sar vi. 169 "The blot..of sin..remaining in the soule of man, in like manner as it did before condonation. (1625)"

(1627.3) Earl of Manchester in Buccleuch MSS. (Hist. MSS. Comm.) I. 267 "Therefore the remain [of the loan] must needs be got up, which is not past 50,000 l. (1627)"

(1627.4) Earl Manch. in Buccleuch MSS. (Hist. MSS. Comm.) I. 267 "The loans have brought in 240,000l. at least; therefore the remain must needs be got up, which is not past 50,000l. (1627)"

(1627.5) HakewillApol. 35 "Onely this part of [Christendom]..remaines..vnlightned, in the darkenes of ignorance. (1627)"

(1627.6) HakewillApol. (1630) 113 "Notwithstanding their [the elements] continuall transmutation, or transelementation,..of one into another, yet by a mutuall retribution it still remaines the same. (1627)"

(1627.7) HakewillApol. iii. ix. (1630) 261 "That little life of it [Rhetoric] which remained being reserved only in the predicancie of Postillars. (1627)"

(1628.1) CokeOn Litt. 326 b, "There be three kinde of Writs of Formedon, viz. The first in the Discender to be brought by the issue in taile, which claime by discent Per formam doni. The second is in the Reuerter, which lieth for him in the reuersion or his heires or Assignes after the state taile be spent. The third is [in] the Remainder, which the Law giueth to him in the remainder, his Heires or Assignes after the determination of the estate taile. (1628)"

(1628.2) CokeOn Litt. 142 "A Rent seruice cannot be reserued out of any inheritance but such as is manurable, whereinto the Lord may enter and take a distresse, as in Lands and Tenements, Reuersions, Remainders, and as some haue said, out of the herbage of lands. (1628)"

(1628.9) Ld. Brooke (F. Grevil) Hum. Learn. cxviii, "And of these Arts it may be said againe, That since their Theoricke is infinite; Of infinite there can no Artes remaine... Their Theoricke then must not waine their vse. (1628)"

(1629.1) RutherfordLett. (1862) I. 44 "Fulfil with joy the remnant of the grounds and remainders of the afflictions of Christ in your body. (1629)"

(1631.6) WeeverAnc. Fun. Mon. 573 "Dead bodies of the Nobilitie whose funerall trophies are wasted with deuouring time and..seates or Pewes for the Townesmen, made ouer their honorable remaines. (1631)"

(1632.6) QuarlesDiv. Fancies iii. lxxviii. (1660) 132 "If then, at most, the measur'd life of Man Be counted but a span, Being half'd, and quarter'd, and disquarter'd thus, What, what remains for us?" (1632)"

(1632.9) in 10th Rep. Hist. MSS. Comm. App. v. 478 "The greate plentie of corne that remaines uppon their handes, and which they cannot utter at any saveing price. (1632)"

(1633.1) JohnsonGerarde's Herbal iii. xl. 1353 "Of this sort [of pitch-tree] there is found another that..remaineth dwarfish, and it carries certaine little nugaments or catkins of the bignesse of a small nut. (1633)"

(1633.2) T. NasheQuaternio (1636) 224 "Both he and shee are branded with infamie, and the stigmaticall characters remaine as yet vndefaced in them. (1633)"

(1633.3) T. StaffordPac. Hib. ii. iii. (1810) 239 "And left the Wood with the Lapwings policie; that they being busied in pursuite of them, the other might remaine secure within that Fastnesse. (1633)"

(1633.4) T. AdamsExp. 2 Peter ii. 22. 1089 "The medicining of the one, and cleansing of the other, did not take away their nature; still the one remained a Dogge, the other a Hogge. (1633)"

(1634.1) CokeInst. iv. lxxiii. Courts Forest (1648) 304 "Seeing the wilde Beasts doe belong to the purlieu man ratione soli, so long as they remain in his grounds, he may kill them, for the property ratione soli is in him. (1634)"

(1634.2) HabingtonCastara ii. Wife, "Shee is so true a friend, her Husband may to her communicate even his ambitions, and if successe Crowne not expectation, remaine neverthelesse uncontemned. (1634)"

(1634.3) JacksonCreed vii. xxxii. &sect.4 "Some authority in all this tumble did still remain in the tribe of Judah. (1634)"

(1637.4) HeywoodDial. iv. 62 "The phane Where the two brothers deify'd remain. (1637)"

(1637.5) HeywoodRoyal Ship 3 "In the very Apex and top thereof [Mt Ararat], there is still to be discerned a blacke Shadow, resembling a Darke Cloud..by the Natives..held, to be the still remaining carkasse of the Arke of Noah. (1637)"

(1637.6) Bk. Com. Prayer, Church Scot., "Communion Rubric, He that celebrates shall..cover with a fair linen cloth, or corporal, that which remaineth of the consecrated elements. (1637)"

(1638.5) JuniusPaint. Ancients 267 "The same admiration remaineth from what side soever you doe looke upon her. (1638)"

(1638.6) JuniusPaint. Ancients 123 "Their worke remaineth in the finest place under the Sunne. (1638)"

(1638.7) L. RobertsMap Commerce ccciii. 39 "That parcell..remaineth entirely upon the Risgoe, perill and fortune of the party that did accept the same. (1638)"

(1638.8) Rawley tr. Bacon's Life &amp. Death (1650) 64 "Aire begets new Aire out of watry moisture, yet notwithstanding the old Aire still remains; whence commeth that Super-Oneration of the Aire. (1638)"

(1638.9) Sir R. CottonAbstr. Rec. Tower 26 "If wee marke but of the great quantities from the penny downward since H. 8. time stamped, how few remain. Whereas of all the Coynes from three pence upwards which are manuable (or manuall) plenty passe still in daily payment. (1638)"

(1639.5) S. Du Verger tr. Camus' Admir. Events 308 "The middlemost called Callinice, which was likeliest to be put off, remained in the world to expect when her beauty..would purchase her a husband. (1639)"

(1639.6) T. de GreyCompl. Horsem. 111 "That no gravell be remaining betwixt the web of the shoo and the sole. (1639)"

(1639.7) T. Brugis tr. Camus' Mor. Relat. 320 "The very features of the faces..remained so ingraven in his imagination. (1639)"

(1639.8) T. CarewTruce in Love entreated i, "For see my heart Is made thy Quiver, where remaines No voyd place for another Dart. (1639)"

(1639.9) Wotton in Reliq. (1651) 340 "Julia a little before dying,..together with an infant she bare,..and she gone without any slip remaining [etc.]. (1639)"

(1639.10) Wotton in Reliq. (1672) 370 "To see whether..I could pick out any counsel to allay that Sputative Symptome which yet remaineth upon me from my obstruction of the spleen. (1639)"

(1640.1) Bp. ReynoldsPassions xxi. 220 "In the Sea when a storme is over, there remaines still an inward working and volutation. (1640)"

(1640.2) BakerChron. (1653) 38 "Footsteps remaining of the Norman language in the English tongue. (1640)"

(1641.12) MiltonAnimadv. iv. Wks. 1851 III. 219 "In this age..God hath renewed our protestation against all those yet remaining dregs of superstition. Let us all goe, every true protested Brittaine throughout the 3 Kingdoms, and render thanks to God the Father of light. (1641)"

(1641.13) MiltonReform. ii. Wks. 1851 III. 71 "Where under..the trample and spurne of all the other Damned..they shall remaine in that plight for ever. (1641)"

(1645.9) in Rushw. Hist. Coll. I. 52 "Two captains of the Club-men (as they were called) being a great number of the inhabitants of several parts of Wiltshire, and some counties adjacent, who gathered themselves together, alledging they did but stand on their own defence, to prevent Plundering; and that they would in that posture remain Neuters until the King and his Parliament should agree. (1645)"

(1645-6.1) Sir W. BreretonLet. to Lenthall 336 "Many of the citizens [of Chester] remain still so enthralled and enawed as that they dare not oppose nor resist. (1645-"

(1646.1) Bp. MaxwellBurd. Issach. in Phenix (1708) II. 313 "We might..add the Remainder of the Waldenses and Albigenses in Piedmont, and the Parts adjoining; or of the Taborites in Bohemia. (1646)"

(1646.2) J. HallPoems 58 "Thou..shalt more long remaine Still mummifi'd within the hearts of men. (1646)"

(1646.3) J. HallHor&ae.aeig; Vac. 100 "Comets, which blaze as long as their piceous substance remaines, and then vanish. (1646)"

(1646.4) J. HallPoems 1 "How better were it for you to remain (Poore Quires) in ancient raggs. (1646)"

(1648.2) HeylinRelat. &amp. Observ. i. 33 "The same Ship..having been so often repaired, and thereby suffered so many substractions and additions, that hardly any part of the old Vessell remained. (1648)"

(1648.8) WilkinsMath. Magic i. vii. 47 "As one of these under Pulleys doth abate halfe of that heavinesse which the weight hath in it self, and cause the power to be in a sub-duple proportion unto it, so two of them doe abate halfe of that which remains, and cause a subquadruple proportion betwixt the weight and the power; three of them a subsextuple, four a sub&dubh.octuple. (1648)"

(1648.10) W. MountagueDevout Ess. i. vi. &sect.1. 53 "The power of remaining in a calme apathy and impassivenesse in all offencive emergencies. (1648)"

(1648-9.1) Eikon Bas. xi. 82 "There remain's in far the Major part of both Houses..so much Learning, Reason, Religion, and just Moderation, as to know how to sever between the use and abuse of things. (1648-"

(1649.2) Drumm. of Hawth.Hist. Jas. I, Wks. (1711) 6 "Many were executed, the remains in peaceful manner sent home, the king having graciously exhorted them to a life according to the law of God and man. (1649)"

(1651.3) Cromwell in H. Cary Mem. Gt. Civil War (1832) II. 380, "I believe the number of these sent will be about a hundred; the remain also being forty or fifty. (1651)"

(1651.4) CulpepperAstrol. Judgem. Dis. (1658) 176 "When the matter..remains still within the lungs..there's but little security of life: and I am confident never a one of the Colledge keeps an insurance office for such a businesse, nor will ensure thereupon at 50 per cent. (1651)"

(1652.14) Wright tr. Camus' Nature's Paradox 28 "Like those Fountaineers, who shewing curious Water-works and Grotta's..set themselves in some known place where they remain dry, whilst every one else is wetted to the skin. (1652)"

(1652-62.1) HeylinCosmogr. i. (1682) 269 "The Town remaining in as good plight..for Trade and Buildings, as most Towns do which want a navigable River. (1652-"

(1653.1) A. WilsonJas. I, 20 "For the Clericks..they are no way sufferable to remain in this Kingdom. (1653)"

(1653.2) BlitheEng. Improv. Impr. (ed. 3) 58 "There will be enough for many years of the other two sorts [of land] remain to husbandrize, and toss and tumble up and down. (1653)"

(1657.3) Jer. TaylorSerm. at Funeral Sir G. Dalstone Wks. 1828 VI. 563 "A good nature, being the relicks and remains of that shipwreck which Adam made, is the proper and immediate disposition to holiness..When good nature is heightened by the grace of God, that which was natural becomes now spiritual. (1657)"

(1657.4) J. SmithMyst. Rhet. 137 "Metabasis... A figure whereby the parts of an oration or speech are knit together: and is, When we are briefly put in mind of what hath been said, and what remains further to be spoken. (1657)"

(1657.5) R. LigonBarbadoes 102 "Neither themselves, nor any other, can remaine in them [sc. their houses] without sweltring. (1657)"

(1657.6) R. LigonBarbadoes (1673) 25 "There remains, making a great part of that flat, a kinde of Bog or Morost. (1657)"

(1657.7) RumseyOrg. Salutis iv. (1659) 17 "That..there remains part of the meat undigested..is too well known to moderate Surfeiters. (1657)"

(1657.8) SparrowBk. Com. Prayer (1661) 279 "If any of the Bread And Wine remain,..if consecrated, it is all to be spent..by the Communicants. (1657)"

(1657.9) SerjeantSchism Dispach't 478 "Would any government..remain on foot three years to an end, if, etc. (1657)"

(1657.10) TomlinsonRenou's Disp. 592 "The crassament that remains..is called Powder of Mercury. (1657)"

(1657.11) TomlinsonRenou's Disp. 403* "The Dead Sea because of its vastity..remains immovable. (1657)"

(1658.3) OsbornJas. I. (1673) 526 "Forced to..die in a Prison, or play at Bo-peep all the remainder of their days with their Creditors. (1658)"

(1658.4) Phillips, "Reliquation, remains, or a being in arrearage. (1658)"

(1658.5) RowlandMoufet's Theat. Ins. 908 "That Honey is best for substance, which..if you lift it up..falls to the earth still homogeneous, unsevered, no way parted asunder, but remaines in one continued flake or line. (1658)"

(1658.6) Sir T. BrowneHydriot. iii. 43 "How slender a masse will remain upon an open and urging Fire of the carnall composition. (1658)"

(1658.7) Sir T. BrowneHydriot. ii. (1736) 31 "If according to Learned Conjecture, the Bodies of Men shall rise where their greatest Relics remaine, many are not like to err in the Topography of their Resurrection. (1658)"

(1660.1) BarrowEuclid ii. i. "Schol., Let + A be to be multiplied into B-C; then because + A is not affirmed of all B, but only of a part of it, whereby it exceeds C, therefore AC must remain denied. (1660)"

(1660.6) H. MoreMyst. Godl. v. xvii. 206 "Suspecting our selves not to have emerged quite out of this General Apostasy of the Church, into which the Spirit of God has foretold she would be lapsed for 1260 years; let us see if we can find out what Remainders of this Lapse are still upon us. (1660)"

(1660.7) Jer. TaylorDuct. Dubit. ii. ii. rule ii, "If we list to observe that..Pythagoras..and Socrates had great names amongst the leading Christians, it is no wonder if in the percolation something of the relish should remain. (1660)"

(1660.8) Jer. TaylorDuct. Dubit. ii. iii. rule xiv. &sect.29 (1676) 372 "The remaining part [of the books of the Fathers] have passed through the limbecks and strainers of Hereticks [etc.]. (1660)"

(1662.11) J. ChandlerVan Helmont's Oriat. 273 "This..might..remain safe for a long time, without a lavishment of the health. (1662)"

(1662.12) J. ChandlerVan Helmont's Oriat. Prayer, "Tis true indeed, that thou wilt be worshipped by men in the Spirit, but not in such a manner that it may remain in the undistinction of the first object. (1662)"

(1664.4) EvelynSylva 102 "It is continually to be fed with short and fitting wood, that no part remains unfir'd. (1664)"

(1664.5) H. PowerExp. Philos. 56 "Your Wire-drawers know, that if they take a short piece of Wire,..and drill it through, that then though they draw it out to the smalness of a hair, yet will it still remain hollow quite through in despite of their Wurdle. (1664)"

(1664.6) J. WebbStone-Heng (1725) 193 "These rude Remains being put in Work, in his Judgment, before the Flood. (1664)"

(1664.7) PowerExp. Philos. iii. 167 "The Angles of Inclination and Elevation will remain the same. (1664)"

(1664.8) PowerExp. Philos. iii. 168 "An Intrinsecal Tendency that it [the Magnet] has of its own, to bring all its parts to their right and determinate points, there to remain in a perfect Stability. (1664)"

(1665.1) BrathwaitComment. Two Tales (1901) 97 "The Remainder of his Hours henceforth was to number his Daies. (1665)"

(1665.2) BoyleOccas. Refl., Occas. Medit. iv. iv, "He gave away more out of the Remainder of his Estate, than every liberal Man would have done out of the Whole. (1665)"

(1665.4) HookeMicrogr. vii. 38 "Sealed Thermometers, which I have, by several tryals, at last brought to a great certainty and tenderness:..for graduating the stem, I fix that for the beginning of my division where the surface of the liquor in the stem remains when the ball is placed in..water, that is so cold that it just begins to freeze..(which I mark with an [0] or nought). (1665)"

(1665.5) J. WebbStone-Heng (1725) 88 "The Pylasters were by the Tool and Mallet wrought, as the Rabbets yet remaining, or Returns in some of them plainly shew. (1665)"

(1665.6) J. WebbStone-Heng (1725) 153 "An Asylum, to which any of them flying remain'd indemnified for whatever Delict committed. (1665)"

(1665.7) M. NeedhamMed. Medicin&ae.aeig; 401 "There remains no more room for the like palliatory proceeding. (1665)"

(1665.8) ManleyGrotius' Low C. Warres 544 "More..that among all these turnings, would yet remain faithful to their Parties. (1665)"

(1665.9) ManleyGrotius' Low C. Warres 331 "The men that remained in the Town were slain, so also were some women after they had been lustfully abused. (1665)"

(1669.9) StubbeLet. 17 Dec. in Boyle's Wks. (1772) I. Life 91 "It creates in the throat such a sense, as remains, after drinking *pepper-posset. (1669)"

(1669.10) SturmyMariner's Mag. i. ii. 9 "In what year you would know what is the *Prime Number, add 1 to the date thereof, and then divide it by 19, and that which remaineth upon the Division..is the Number required. (1669)"

(1669.14) WorlidgeSyst. Agric. ix. &sect.2 (1681) 177 "A Salt-Cat..which makes the Pigeons much affect the place: and such that casually come there, usually remain where they find such good entertainment. (1669)"

(1669.15) Address Yng. Gentry Eng. 80 "There remains nothing of it but the shade of a great name, the empty curtail of its faint eccho. (1669)"

(1669.16) Lond. Gaz. No. 367/4 "The said Officers..shall proceed to the payment of the ensuing Orders, as the remain of that Taxe and the remaines of the [other] Taxe shall come in. (1669)"

(1670.1) CottonEspernon iii. x. 525 "They would never again be so fully reconcil'd, that there would not still remain a Core in the bosom of the one or the other. (1670)"

(1670.2) CottonEspernon. i. iv. 181 "The violence of the powder was so great, that it blew up the floor where the Duke sate at dinner,..the Duke only by a miracle of Fortune remaining still sitting, and upright in the midst of this subversion. (1670)"

(1672.5) JosselynNew Eng. Rarities 101 "They beat the corn in a mortar and sift the flower out of it: the remainder they call Homminey. (1672)"

(1672.6) MarvellReh. Transp. (1673) II. 68 "That it should remain upon Record how Syllogistical a life his hath been to the Stile and Principles that he has manag'd and prosecuted. (1672)"

(1672.7) MarvellReh. Transp. i. 203 "There remains but one Flower more that I have a mind to; but that indeed is a Rapper. 'Tis a Flower of the Sun. (1672)"

(1672.8) Sir T. BrowneLet. to Friend ix. (1881) 134 "His inwards and flesh remaining could make no bouffage, but a light bit for the grave. (1672)"

(1672.9) WoodLife (1848) 23 "Being just..in capacity of spending the remainder of his dayes in ease and quietness, he died. (1672)"

(1672.10) Cowell's Interpr., "In super, is a Word used by Auditors in their Accounts in the Exchequer, when they say so much remains in super to such an Accountant, that is, so much remains due upon such an Account. (1672)"

(1673.1) GrewAnat. Roots ii. &sect.60 "The remainder, is..an Oleous Elixyr, or extract, in the form of a Milk. (1673)"

(1673.2) RayTrav. (1738) I. 419 "A famous engine to raise up water..There is so little of it remaining that it is impossible thence to find out all the contrivance and intrigue of it. (1673)"

(1673.3) TempleObserv. Netherl. Pref. (Seager), "The remainders of their state are..kept alive by neglect or disconcert of their enemies. (1673)"

(1673.4) Lady's Call. i. i. &sect.12 "There will not remain many topics of discourse, unless this be called in to supply. (1673)"

(1673.5) Phil. Trans. VIII. 6052 "The pledgets being then thrown off, the blood continued staunch, and the mouths of the Arteries remained close. (1673)"

(1674.9) LeybournCompl. Surveyor 237 "An Instrument which he calleth a Peractor, which is no other than a Theodelite, only the Box and Needle is so fitted to the Center of the Instrument, that..the Index may be turned about, and yet the Box and Needle remain immoveable. (1674)"

(1674.10) PettyDisc. bef. R. Soc. 59 "Suppose, that the Oars remain the same length, but that the Blade be doubled. (1674)"

(1674.11) RayCollection 136 "(Manner of making Vitriol) The liquor that remains after the vitriol is crystallized, they call the mother. (1674)"

(1674.12) S. JeakeArith. (1696) 164 "If the remain be added to the Number substracted, the Total will be parallel to the Number from which Substraction is made. (1674)"

(1674.13) StaveleyRom. Horseleech 131 "Her example was not followed by any of the Nobility, or others, who had incorporated any of the Abby Lands into their estates, but the Queen restored only what remained in the Crown un-aliened from the same. (1674)"

(1677.5) HalePrim. Orig. Man. ii. x. 235 "Which was accordingly done, and remains of Record in the Exchequer. (1677)"

(1677.6) W. Harris tr. Lemery's Course Chym. i. xvi. (1686) 376 "The spirit of wine being a sulphur does unite and imbody with those that remain. (1677)"

(1677.7) Govt. Venice 238 "Sixtus V, and Clement VIII, granted Safe-conduct to the Maranes, to remain, and traffick in the Town of Ancona, without being molested or disturbed by the Inquisitors. (1677)"

(1678.5) CudworthIntell. Syst. i. v. 759 "Matter..perpetually remains, and all other things whatsoever are but..passions and affections and dispositions thereof, as musicalness and unmusicalness, in respect of Socrates. (1678)"

(1678.6) G. MackenzieCrim. Laws Scot. i. vi. &sect.19. 51 "Their goods should be put under sicker Burrows,..under which they must remain ay and while they suffer an Assize. (1678)"

(1678.7) MarvellGrowth Popery Wks. (Grosart) IV. 294 "So that the two great naval powers of Europe being crushed together, he might remain sole arbitrator of the ocean. (1678)"

(1681.4) NevilePlato Rediv. 139 "Sweden remains in point of Constitution and Property exactly as it did anciently. (1681)"

(1681.5) R. KnoxHist. Ceylon 123 "Many times we were forced to remain an hungry. (1681)"

(1681.6) StairInstit. i. xiii. &sect.15 (1693) 122 "With us there remains the Tacit Hypothecation of the Fruits on the Ground..belonging to the Possessor, for the Terms or the Years Rent. (1681)"

(1681.7) TateLear Ep. Ded., "My Zeal for all the Remains of Shakespear. (1681)"

(1681.8) TateLear Ded., "Nothing but..my Zeal for all the Remains of Shakespear, cou'd have wrought me to so bold an Under&dubh.taking. (1681)"

(1681.9) Lond. Gaz. No. 1633/4 "Notice, that whereas divers Fines that were lost or burnt in the late Fire in the Temple, remain uningrossed for want of bringing in the Chyrograps, or exemplifications thereof. (1681)"

(1681.10) Lond. Gaz. No. 1633/4 "There is now published a Printed List of all such Fines as remain uningrossed. (1681)"

(1681.11) Lond. Gaz. No. 1587/2 "The Empress and her Court will remain till the River be open, so that she may go by Water. (1681)"

(1682.6) WhelerJourn. Greece iii. 238 "It..remaineth yet a Bashalique, although of late governed by a Deputy. (1682)"

(1682.7) in Picture of Liverpool (1834) 108 "Thomas Mathews elected sideman for the remainder of the Year. (1682)"

(1682-90.1) HookePosth. Wks. (1705) 565 "If on a Stilyard a weight of thirty Pound be hung at thirty times the distance from the Center that a weight of nine hundred Pounds is hung, the Stilyard shall remain in &ae.aeig;quilibrio. (1682-"

(1684.1) Dryden tr. Maimbourg's Hist. League 163 "Who dar'd not to arrest any of them singly, the two remaining being at liberty, and in condition to give themselves satisfaction on the Aggressours. (1684)"

(1684.2) R. WallerNat. Exper. 10 "Our Instrument remains still unalterably just to every place where 'tis made use of. (1684)"

(1684.3) R. H.Sch. Recreat. 53 "Controversion..in Wheeling is performed by the Front of the Squadron, so that whilst the Rank makes the Motion, the File remains. (1684)"

(1684.4) She-Wedding (title-p.), "For which Fact the said Parties were both Committed, and one of them remains now in the Round House at Greenwich. (1684)"

(1687.4) DrydenHind &amp. P. iii. 306 "It now remains for you to school your child, And ask why God's anointed he reviled. (1687)"

(1687.5) PettyTreat. Naval Philos. i. ii, "Let the supernatant sides of a Ship so much tumble..as that the said sides may remain perpendicular when the Ship stoops. (1687)"

(1687.6) RycautHist. Turks II. 228 "The Ambassadour remained aboard unsaluted and unacknowledged by the publick Ministers of the City. (1687)"

(1687.7) T. K.Veritas Evang. 98 "There would have remained illustrious Memory thereof, at least in some of the primordial Churches. (1687)"

(1687.8) Penal Laws 32 "This..is the antient Remain of the Soveraign Power and Prerogative of the Kings of England. (1687)"

(1688.1) HolmeArmoury iii. 149/1 "Skew, a term in Herald-Painting, which is with a Wing or Hares Foot [to] brush away all the loose edges of Silver and Gold that remains of the working of them. (1688)"

(1688.2) HolmeArmoury iii. 125/2 [Printing] "Strip a Form, is to take away all the Furniture from about it, and lett it so remain on the Letter board to be distributed. (1688)"

(1688.3) R. HolmeArmoury ii. 205/1, "I have some of the hair, or down of the Salamander, which I have several times put in the Fire, and made it red hot, and after taken it out, which being cold, yet remained perfect wool. [Cf. 1481 above.] " (1688)"

(1690.2) LockeHum. Underst. ii. xvii. (1727) I. 88 "The clearest idea it can get of infinity, is the confused, incomprehensible remainder of endless, addible numbers, which affords no prospect of stop or boundary. (1690)"

(1690.5) LockeHum. Und. ii. xxi. &sect.71 "The operative Powers..remaining equally able to operate, or to forbear operating after, as before the Decree of the Will, are in a State, which, if one pleases, may be call'd Indifferency. (1690)"

(1690.6) TempleEss., Poetry Wks. 1720 I. 243 "Where&dubh.ever the Roman Colonies had remained, and their Language had been generally spoken, the common People used that still, but vitiated with the base Allay of their Provincial Speech. (1690)"

(1691.1) BlountLaw Dict., "Arrearages, the Remain of an Accompt, or a Sum of Money remaining in the Hands of an Accomptant. It is sometimes used more generally for any Money unpaid at a due Time. (1691)"

(1691.2) BoyleHist. Air (1692) 49, "I speak the less promisingly of what I am to say in the remaining part of this paper. (1691)"

(1693.6) StairInst. Law Scot. ii. vii. &sect.6 "When divers Owners have parts of the same Tenement, it cannot be said to be a perfect division, because the Roof remaineth Roof to both, and the ground supporteth both. (1693)"

(1693.7) StairInst. Law Scot. i. iii. &sect.5 (ed. 2) 21 "They remain only as bonds upon the good-will and honesty of these who are thereby bound, of which there are severals. (1693)"

(1694.2) DrydenTo Sir G. Kneller 163 "Good heav'n! that sots and knaves should be so vain, To wish their vile resemblance may remain! And stand recorded, at their own request, To future days, a libel or a jest! " (1694)"

(1696.6) ScarburghEuclid 180 "If above the exact Multiple of the Consequent, there remains in the Antecedent any Quotal part of the Consequent, as an half, a third, a fourth, or a tenth part of the Consequent, (or otherwise thus named, a Sesquialteral, a Sesquitertial, a Sesquiquartal, a *Sesquidecimal part, &amp.c.). (1696)"

(1696.7) WhistonTh. Earth iii. iv. 201 "[To] ascribe the plainest remains of the Animal and Vegetable Kingdom to the sportings of Nature,..as some persons are inclinable to do. (1696)"

(1697.1) CongreveMourn. Bride ii. v, "The poor remains..Yet fresh and unconsum'd by time and worms. (1697)"

(1697.2) DrydenVirg. Georg. iv. 274 "Then having spent the last Remains of Light, They give their Bodies due Repose at Night. (1697)"

(1697.8) DampierVoy. (1698) I. xi. 318 "They will sell 10 or 15 Tuns out of 100, and yet seemingly carry their complement [of Cloves] to Batavia; for they will pour water among the remaining part of their Cargo. (1697)"

(1697.9) DrydenVirg. Georg. iv. 378 "The sick..idle in their empty Hives remain, Benum'd with Cold, and listless of their Gain. (1697)"

(1699.8) Phil. Trans. XXI. 271 "When a Cod hath shot his Masculine Seed, there doth still remain in his Soft Rows, a great deal of Seeding Matter, where out more Seedly Animals are produced, then were shot out of it the Year before. (1699)"

(1702.2) VanbrughFalse Friend iv. i, "She has still love enough for you, not to be displeas'd with the utmost proofs you can give that you have still a warm remain for her. (1702)"

(1702.3) W. J. tr. Bruyn's Voy. Levant iii. 9 "With an Intention, as I said before, of visiting all the remainders of Antiquity in that Place. (1702)"

(1702.4) Act 1 Anne Stat. 2. c. 3 &sect.6 "A Bushel according to the Standards remaining in the Custody of the Chamberlains of Her Majesties Exchequer commonly called..by the Name of the Winchester Bushel. (1702)"

(1704.2) J. HarrisLex. Techn. I, "Triemimeris, is a Branch of the C&ae.aeig;sura of a Latine Verse, when after the first Foot of the Verse there remains an odd Syllable, which helps to make the next Foot. (1704)"

(1704.3) J. HarrisLex. Techn. I. s.v. Earth, "Earth, which the Chymists call Terra Damnata and Caput Mortuum, is the last of the five Chymical Principles, and is that which remains after all the other Principles are extracted by Distilation, Calcination, &amp.c. (1704)"

(1704.4) Locke (J.), "The standard in our mint being now settled, the rules and methods of essaying suited to it should remain unvariable. (1704)"

(1704.5) RayCreation (ed. 4) 31 "The Juice of Grapes is drawn as well from the Rape, where they remain whole, as from a Vat, where they are bruis'd. (1704)"

(1704.6) SwiftMech. Operat. Spir. Misc. (1711) 271, "I retrench'd those Parts that might give most Offence; and have now ventur'd to publish the Remainder. (1704)"

(1705.2) StanhopeParaphr. I. 25 "Frail Mortality will always have some Remains of Shadow and Dusk. (1705)"

(1705.3) Lond. Gaz. No. 4116/3 "Only her Hull from the Taffrill to the Midships remained above Water. (1705)"

(1705.4) Lond. Gaz. No. 4116/3 "Only her Hull from the Taffrill to the Midships remained above Water. (1705)"

(1705.5) tr. Bosman's Guinea 410 "The Buffel soon trod out the small remainder of the Snuff of his Life. (1705)"

(1706.1) Phillips (ed. Kersey), "Continent Cause of a Distemper, is that on which the Disease depends so immediately, that it continues so long as that remains, and ceases when the said Cause is remov'd. (1706)"

(1706.2) Phillips (ed. Kersey), "Track, a Foot-print, or Foot&dubh.step, the rut of a Coach-wheel, the run of a Ship, a Mark that remains of any thing. (1706)"

(1706.3) Phillips (ed. Kersey) s.v. Tower, "*Hollow Tower (in Fortif.), a Rounding made of the remainder of two Brisures, to joyn the Courtin to the Orillon; where the Small-Shot are plac'd that they may not be too much expos'd to the Enemies View. (1706)"

(1706.4) Phillips (ed. Kersey), "Charged Cylinder..that part which receives the Charge of Powder and Shot..Vacant Cylinder, that part of the Hollow which remains empty, when the Gun is Charg'd. (1706)"

(1706.5) Phillips s.v. Number, "Prime, Simple, or Incomposit Number..is a Number, which can only be measur'd or divided by it self, or by Unity, without leaving any Remainder. (1706)"

(1708.3) J. C.Compl. Collier (1845) 43 "The Remainder of four Yards is left for a Pillar to support the Roof and Weight of the Earth above. (1708)"

(1708.4) J. PhilipsCyder ii. 106 "Water will imbibe The small Remains of Spirit, and acquire A vinous Flavour. (1708)"

(1708.5) J. ChamberlayneSt. Gt. Brit. i. ii. xiii. (1743) 123 "The Tally being cloven asunder..one Part thereof, called the Stock, is delivered to the Party that pays the money, and the other part, called Counter&dubh.stock, or Counterfoil remains with them. (1708)"

(1708.7) Kersey, "Complement of the Courtin..the Remainder of the Courtin after its Flank is taken away. Complement of the Line of Defence, is the Remainder of the Line of Defence, after you have taken away the Angle of the Flank. (1708)"

(1708.9) Termes de la Ley 248, "Diminution, is when the Plaintiff or Defendant in a Writ of Error alledges..that part of the Record remains in the Inferiour Court not certifyed, and prays that it be certifyed by Certiorari. (1708)"

(1709.4) SteeleTatler No. 86 &page.3, "I met him with all the respect due to so reverend a vegetable; for you are to know, that is my sense of a person who remains idle in the same place for half a century. (1709)"

(1710.1) J. HarrisLex. Techn. II. s.v., "After Tin from the burnt Ore is melted down and remelted, there will sometimes remain a different Slugg in the bottom of the Float, this they call Mount-Egg. (1710)"

(1710.2) London &amp. WiseCompl. Gard. (1719) 136 "The Cock spur, or dry dead parts of Branches that remain where a Branch was shorten'd above the next Eye or Shoot. (1710)"

(1711.15) Shaftesb.Charac. (1737) III. 337 "There are further miracles remaining for 'em to perform, e'er they can in modesty plead the apostolick or messenger-authority. (1711)"

(1711.16) Shaftesb.Charac. III. Misc. iv. i. 194 "The Question is, `What constitutes the We or I?' And, `Whether the I of this instant, be the same with that of any instant proceding, or to come.'.. So that the same successional We or I must remain still, on this account, undecided. (1711)"

(1711.17) Shaftesb.Charac. (1737) I. 224 "Let a nation remain ever so rude or barbarous, it must have its poets, rhapsoders, historiographers. (1711)"

(1711.18) Fingall MSS. in 10th Rep. Hist. MSS. Comm. App. V. 131 "They had orders to remain at the nigher end of the four mile pass. (1711)"

(1711.19) Lond. Gaz. No. 4940/1 "All the Fleet is return'd.., except six Sultans and two Gallies remaining with the Captain-Basha. (1711)"

(1712.9) S. SewallDiary 29 Feb., "I ask'd the Govr. to take a Copy of it: He said No, It should remain yet in Petto..and put it in his Pocket. (1712)"

(1712.10) T. Brown etc. Scarron's Wks. 7 "He would not suffer the miserable Remains of a scatter'd Company of Strollers to lodge in an Inn; but brought them to his own House, where the Carter having laid down the Strolling Furniture, return'd Home. (1712)"

(1714.3) MandevilleFab. Bees (1733) II. 224 "No female of twelve would be refractory, if applied to; or remain long uncourted, if there were men. (1714)"

(1714.4) Fr. Bk. of Rates 400 "Arrest of the King's Council, for levying of 30 Sols per 100 upon all Cheese from Foreign Parts, except from England and Holland, which remains prohibit. (1714)"

(1715.1) BurnetOwn Time (1724) I. 809 "In the case of lunaticks, the right still remained in him: Only the guardianship, or the exercise of it, was to be lodged with a Prince Regent. (1715)"

(1715.2) BurnetOwn Time (1766) I. 247 "Scarce any prints of what he had been remained. (1715)"

(1715.3) LeoniPalladio's Archit. (1742) II. 8 "This prospect is call'd Peripteros, that is, wing'd round.., the same round-wing'd prospect remaining..to every one that saw the Temple in flank. (1715)"

(1715.4) LeoniPalladio's Archit. (1742) I. 82 "The Banks are exposed to be wash'd away by the Waters, whence the Bridge in such a case would become destitute of Land-tyes, and remain an Island. (1715)"

(1716.6) PopeBasset-Table 76 "But of what marble must that breast be form'd, To gaze on Basset, and remain unwarm'd? " (1716)"

(1716.7) PrideauxO. &amp. N. Test. Connected i. iii. (1718) I. 140 "The remainder of this sect still subsists in the east under the same name of Sabians... That which hath given them the greatest credit among the people of the east is, that the best of their astronomers have been of this sect... For the stars being the gods they worshipped, they made them the chief subject of their studies. (1716)"

(1716.8) PopeLett. (1735) I. 290 "Chagrins, more than their small Remain of Life seem'd destin'd to undergo. (1716)"

(1716.9) SouthSerm. X. vi. (R.), "All other things..remaining inviolately the same under both covenants. (1716)"

(1716.10) SouthSerm. (1842) III. 522 "As long as the old ferment remains unthrown out, a man cannot be safe. (1716)"

(1717.1) BerkeleyTour in Italy 19 Jan. Wks. 1871 IV. 527 "Hard by we saw the remains of the circus of Sallustius. (1717)"

(1717.2) BolingbrokeLet. to Sir W. Windham (1753) 69 "When..she took the resolution of laying him aside, there was a strength still remaining sufficient to have supported her government. (1717)"

(1725.9) Lond. Gaz. No. 6366/2 "All Goods..which shall have remained in His Majesty's Warehouse for Security of the Duties Twelve Months, the Subsidies and Duties not paid. (1725)"

(1726.1) AyliffeParergon 74 "Unless he recus'd him as a suspected Judge, he ought to remain under his Jurisdiction. (1726)"

(1726.2) Bailey (ed. 3), "A swank (at Bocking in Essex) that Remainder of Liquor at the Bottom of a Tankard, Pot or Cup, which is just sufficient for one Draught; which is not accounted good Manners to divide with the left Hand Man; and according to the Quantity is called either a large or a little Swank. (1726)"

(1726.4) J. AyliffeParergon Juris Canonici Anglicani 228 "The wife of one Bury was divorc'd from him upon the Score of Frigidity, it appearing that for three years after the Marriage she remain'd Virgo Intacta on the Account of the Husband's Impotency. (1726)"

(1727.3) De FoeSyst. Magic i. iii. (1840) 76 "It remains a question here, by what power..the magicians of Egypt..in short mimicked or imitated the miracles of Moses and Aaron. (1727)"

(1727.4) De FoeSyst. Magic i. ii. (1840) 38 "Yet this diminutive rank of sovereignty remained many ages in the world. (1727)"

(1727.5) SwiftGulliver ii. i, "I..laid myself at full length upon the handkerchief, with the remainder of which he lapped me up to the head. (1727)"

(1727.6) Minutes of Yearly Meeting of Soc. Friends 26 Mar. (J. Phillips, 1783), "Any person denied by a Monthly Meeting is adjudged as disowned by Friends and to stand and remain in that state, till by his repentance..he is reconciled to Friends, or reinstated in membership among them. (1727)"

(1727-41.1) ChambersCycl., "Passive prayer, in the language of mystick divines, is a total suspension, or ligature of the intellectual faculties, in virtue whereof the soul remains, of itself and as to its own power, impotent with regard to the producing of any effects. (1727-"

(1727-41.2) ChambersCycl. s.v., "The custom..of blessing gloves, in the coronation of the kings of France, is a remain of the eastern practice of giving possession with the glove. (1727-"

(1727-41.3) ChambersCycl. s.v., "This war lasted ten years; but at length the Titans were vanquished; Jupiter remained in peaceable possession of heaven, and the Titans were buried under huge mountains thrown on their heads. (1727-"

(1727-41.4) ChambersCycl. s.v. Caraite, "The Caraites themselves pretend to be the remains of the ten tribes led captive by Salmanassar. (1727-"

(1727-46.1) ThomsonSummer 35 "Thus to remain, Amid the flux of many thousand years. (1727-"

(1727-51.1) ChambersCycl. s.v., "There is also a kind of Excommunication by Inch of Candle; wherein, the time a lighted Candle continues burning, is allowed the sinner to come to repentance; but after which, he remains excommunicated to all intents and purposes. (1727-"

(1727-51.2) ChambersCycl. s.v., "All we have remaining of these contourniated medals, seem to have been struck about the same time. (1727-"

(1727-51.3) ChambersCycl. s.v. Gilding, "The work being thus far gilt, when dry, remains either to be burnished, or matted... To mat, is to give it a light lick in the places not burnished, with a pencil dipt in size. (1727-"

(1727-51.4) ChambersCycl. s.v., "Of all metals, gold and silver alone are fixed; i.e. on remaining a long time exposed to the most intense flame, they alone lose nothing of their weight. (1727-"

(1727-52.1) ChambersCycl. s.v. Printing, "When an omission is to be made..If it be but little, the compositor takes it out, and drives out the remaining matter. (1727-"

(1731.5) Hist. Litteraria III. 762 "Finding, that notwithstanding the great pains he had taken, many Controversies remained still undecided. (1731)"

(1732.1) BerkeleyAlciphr. II. 35 "After which [i.e. the flying off of the volatile salt or spirit] the Oil remains dry and insipid, but without any sensible diminution of its weight, by the loss of that volatile essence of the soul, that &ae.aeig;thereal aura. (1732)"

(1732.2) BostonCrook in Lot (1805) 53 "He can raise the oldest sit-fast, concerning which there remains no hope with us. (1732)"

(1733.2) in G. W. Forrest Sel. Lett. Bombay Secr. 57 "That..the garrison of Seepoys shall become the subjects of the said Honble Company, and remain in their..service at the usual pay that is now paid to the garrison Seepoys of Bombay. (1733)"

(1734.1) NorthExamen iii. vii. &sect.99 (1740) 581 "But see what false disingenuous Dealing here is to slobber over a base Business that will remain an eternal Shame to his Party. (1734)"

(1734.2) PopeLet. to Swift 15 Sept., "I have scribled the remainder of this page full. (1734)"

(1735.1) PopeDonne's Sat. iv. 42 "The suit..Was velvet in the youth of good queen Bess, But mere tuff-taffety what now remain'd. (1735)"

(1739.1) GrayLet. to West 16 Nov., "This Carnival lasts only from Christmas to Lent; one half of the remaining part of the year is past in remembering the last, the other in expecting the future Carnival. (1739)"

(1739.3) Connect. Col. Rec. 230 "Being informed that a certain piece of land in the county of Windham..is not in any town but still remains a peculiar,..Be it enacted..That the said tract of land be annexed to the town of Voluntown. (1739)"

(1740.1) W. DouglassDisc. Curr. Brit. Plant. Amer. 10 "In the following Years no more new Emissions, but some Re&dubh.emissions of the remainder. (1740)"

(1740.2) Connect. Col. Rec. (1874) VIII. 320 "The remainder of the said thirty thousand pounds..shall be loaned out to particular persons. (1740)"

(1740.3) Hist. Jamaica 321 "From the Boiler the Liquor is emptied into a Cooler, where it remains till it is fit to be potted. (1740)"

(1743.3) PopeLast Will Wks. 1751 IX. 270 "All the residue and remainder to be considered as undisposed of, and to go to my next of kin. (1743)"

(1743.4) Swinburne's Wills (ed. 6) 180 "Provided that if any of the Remainder Men alien the Land, his Estate shall cease. (1743)"

(1744.1) BerkeleySiris &sect.344 "God remains for ever one and the same. (1744)"

(1744.2) HarrisThree Treat. i. (1765) 18 "And now then, continued he, as we have gone thus far, and have settled between us what we believe Art to be; shall we go a little farther, or is your Patience at an end? Oh! no, replied I, not if any thing be left. We have walked so leisurely, that much remains of our Way. (1744)"

(1744.3) HoylePiquet iii. 28 "If the younger-hand has one Ace dealt him, what are the Odds of his taking in one or two of the three remaining Aces?" (1744)"

(1744.4) JacobLaw Dict. (ed. 5) s.v. Voluntary, "Remainders limited in Settlements, to a Man's right Heirs, etc. are deemed Voluntary in Equity, and the Persons claiming under them are called Volunteers. (1744)"

(1744.5) PopeLetters (L.), "I grieve with the old, for so many additional inconveniences and chagrins, more than their small remain of life seemed destined to undergo. (1744)"

(1744.7) Med. Essays Soc. Edinb. V. ii. 793 "Sometimes after all the other Yaws are fallen off..there remains one large Yaw, high knobbed, red and moist; this is commonly called the Master-yaw. (1744)"

(1746.4) Watson in Phil. Trans. XLIV. 741 "It remains now, that I endeavour to lay before you a Solution why our Bodies are so shocked in the Experiments with the electrified Water. (1746)"

(1746.5) WesleyWks. (1872) II. 21 "The other part [of the crowd] remained a little way off, and loured defiance. (1746)"

(1746-7.1) HerveyMedit. (1767) I. 10 "These dumb Monitors..had received a Charge to preserve their Names, and were the remaining Trustees of their Memory. (1746-"

(1747.1) J. Spence (title) "Polymetis: an Enquiry concerning the agreement between the works of the Roman Poets and the Remains of the Ancient Artists. (1747)"

(1747.2) Mrs. DelanyLife &amp. Corr. (1861) II. 481 "After the dinner is over the common people are let in to carry off all that remains..; you may imagine what a notable scramblement it occasions. (1747)"

(1750.1) BlanckleyNav. Expositor, "Mails, are made of Iron, and interwoven, not unlike a Chain; they are for rubbing off the loose Hemp which remains on Lines or white Cordage after it is made. (1750)"

(1750.3) JohnsonRambler No. 71 &page.14 "The few moments remaining are to be considered as the last trust of heaven. (1750)"

(1750.4) JohnsonRambler No. 19 &page.15 "So much remains in the power of others, that reason is forced at last to rest in neutrality. (1750)"

(1751.1) ChambersCycl. s.v. Chain, "A gold chain..remains to the person after his being divested of that magistrature, as a mark that he has passed the Chair. (1751)"

(1751.2) ChambersCycl. s.v., "If urine, citron-juice, or spirit of vitriol, be cast on a green ribband, it becomes blue; by reason the yellow of the greening-weed is thereby exhaled and consumed; so that nothing but blue remains behind. (1751)"

(1751.3) ChambersCycl. s.v. Purlieu, "The greatest part of the new afforestations were still remaining. (1751)"

(1752.3) Bk. Com. Prayer, To find Easter for ever, "Table to find Easter-Day, To find the Golden Number, or Prime, add one to the Year of our Lord, and then divide by 19; the remainder, if any, is the Golden Number. (1752)"

(1753.1) ChambersCycl. Supp. s.v., "A man is said to be bound or held in Body and goods; that is, he is liable to remain in prison; in default of payment. (1753)"

(1753.2) ChambersCycl. Supp. s.v., "The semi-diameter of a circle is a constant quantity; for while the absciss and semi-ordinates increase, it remains the same. (1753)"

(1753.3) ChambersCycl. Supp., s.v., "The remaining plants, which are the female Hemp, called by the farmer Karle-hemp, are to be left till Michaelmas. (1753)"

(1753.4) ChambersCycl. Supp., "Drabs, in the English salt works, a name given to a sort of wooden cases into which the salt is put, as soon as it is taken out of the boiling pan..Their bottoms are made..gradually inclining forwards; by which means the saline liquor that remains mixed with the salt easily drains out. In some places they use cribs instead of the Drabs. (1753)"

(1753.5) ChambersCycl. Supp. s.v., "In some churches remains of the Ambos are still seen. (1753)"

(1755.5) SmollettDon Quix. (1803) IV. 139 "They threw down their staves, laid aside their rochets or mantles, so as to remain in their doublets. (1755)"

(1755.6) Gentl. Mag. XXV. 33 "When the shells are distributed according to their proper classes and tribes, nothing remains but to remark their less essential differences, by which they are subdivided into genuses and species. (1755)"

(1755.7) Mem. Capt. P. Drake i. 2 "The Family remained in peaceable possession of this Estate..until the War..when..they forfeited, and were driven to shift for themselves. (1755)"

(1757.9) W. WilkieEpigoniad vii. 206, "I never will forsake thee, but remain While struggling life these ruin'd limbs retain. (1757)"

(1757.10) Mem. Principal Trans. Last War 12 "The French inhabitants (whom for Distinction-sake I shall call Acadians)..were by the treaty allowed their option either to retire..or to remain there. (1757)"

(1757.11) Monthly Rev. Sept., "C. Henderson, Bookseller, under the Royal Exchange, having purchased the remainder of the impression of the following very entertaining book..proposes to sell them for 4s. only. (1757)"

(1759.4) MillerGard. Dict. (ed. 7) s.v. Tulipa 13 Q 4/1 "The Stripes should be small and regular, arising from the Bottom of the Flower, for if there are any Remains of the former self-coloured Bottom, the Flower is in Danger of losing its Stripes again. (1759)"

(1759.5) Mills tr. Duhamel's Husb. i. iii. (1762) 5 "The plant would indeed die..: without earth, not even a skeleton of it would remain. (1759)"

(1759.6) RobertsonHist. Scot. iii. Wks. 1813 I. 197 "The sixth article remained the only source of contest and difficulty. (1759)"

(1759.7) RobertsonHist. Scot. vii. Wks. 1813 I. 485 "In some places scarce as many ministers remained as to perform the duties of religious worship. (1759)"

(1760.3) Hist. in Ann. Reg. 59/2 "The whole regular, and no small part of the provincial force, which remained in Canada. (1760)"

(1760.4) in Weekly Reporter (1877) XXV. 470 "The said [allottees] shall street out the same way leading through their said respective allotments so that the same shall be made and ever after remain eleven yards broad at the least. (1760)"

(1762-71.1) H. WalpoleVertue's Anecd. Paint. (1786) IV. 106 "The domestic called a Gardiner..will remain the Gardiner, the projector I should propose to denominate a Gardenist. (1762-"

(1763.1) A. B.Let. 7 May in Gentl. Mag. XXXIII. 246 "The question, Whether a Secretary of State can grant a general warrant against authors, printers, and publishers, without naming any names..remains yet to be determined. (1763)"

(1763.8) Phil. Trans. LIII. 419 "There were still remaining several of the suckers..disposed along its *sickle-shaped Pinnul&ae.aeig;. (1763)"

(1764.1) C. HuttonSyst. Pract. Arith. (1766) 72 "What remains after the tare is taken from the gross, may be called tare-suttle, if there be more deductions... What remains after tret is deducted, may be called tret-suttle, if there be any following deduction. (1764)"

(1764.6) Phil. Trans. LIV. 106 "A full digit of the Sun, or more, remained uneclipsed. (1764)"

(1765.1) BlackstoneComm. I. i. 143 "There still remains a fourth subordinate right, appertaining to every individual, namely, the right of petitioning the king, or either house of parliament, for the redress of grievances. (1765)"

(1765.2) BlackstoneComm. I. 217 "On her..the remainder of the crown, expectant on the death of king William..without issue, was settled by statute. (1765)"

(1765.3) BlackstoneComm. I. viii. 292 "If they continue at sea, the law distinguishes them by the..appellations of jetsam, flotsam, and ligan. Jetsam is where goods are cast into the sea, and there sink and remain under water. (1765)"

(1765.4) Douglas in Phil. Trans. LVIII. 187 "In almost every peat-moss, there are the remains of oak trees. (1765)"

(1765.5) SterneTr. Shandy VIII. 51 "A plan..upon the lower corner of which..there is still remaining the marks of a snuffy finger and thumb. (1765)"

(1765.6) Museum Rust. IV. 256 "The remaining part of the herb must be mowed close to the ground; after which it continueth to sprout out again. (1765)"

(1765.7) Museum Rust. IV. 5 "There still are grass and weeds remaining, that will the next ploughing cause the furrows to be ropy. (1765)"

(1765-8.1) ErskineInst. Law Scot. ii. vi. &sect.33 (1773) 265 "It remains a doubt, whether the power of subsetting is implied in the nature of a tack, without a special clause. (1765-"

(1766.1) BlackstoneComm. II. i. 9 "Property, both in lands and moveables, being thus originally acquired by the first taker,..it remains in him, by the principles of universal law, till such time as he does some other act which shews an intention to abandon it. (1766)"

(1766.2) BlackstoneComm. II. 168 "Vested remainders..are where the estate is invariably fixed, to remain to a determinate person, after the particular estate is spent. (1766)"

(1766.3) BlackstoneComm. II. xviii. 274 "Alienations by particular tenants, when they are greater than the law entitles them to make, and devest the remainder or reversion, are also forfeitures to him whose right is attacked thereby. (1766)"

(1766.4) BlackstoneComm. II. xi. 166 "A lease at will is not held to be such a particular estate, as will support a remainder over. (1766)"

(1766.5) BlackstoneComm. II. 381 "Here A and B have cross remainders by implication, and on the failure of either's issue, the other or his issue shall take the whole. (1766)"

(1766.6) BlackstoneComm. II. 164 "This makes A tenant for years, with remainder to B for life, remainder over to C in fee. (1766)"

(1766.7) BlackstoneComm. II. xii. 186 "If an estate is originally limited to two for life, and after to the heirs of one of them, the freehold shall remain in jointure, without merging in the inheritance. (1766)"

(1766.8) BlackstoneComm. II. 164 "An estate then in remainder may be defined to be, an estate limited to take effect and be enjoyed after another estate is determined. (1766)"

(1766.9) B. MartinSurv. by Goniometer 18 "There remains therefore only the Pantagraph to be described. (1766)"

(1766.10) BlackstoneComm. II. 166 "The remainder-man is seised of his remainder at the same time that the termor is possessed of his term. (1766)"

(1766.11) BlackstoneComm. ii. xii. 183 "The entire tenancy upon the decease of any of them remains to the survivors, and at length to the last survivor. (1766)"

(1766.12) Cavendish in Phil. Trans. LVII. 100 "There is still a good deal of earth remaining in it in a neutralized state. (1766)"

(1766.13) Cavendish in Phil. Trans. LVI. 178 "The air remaining unabsorbed in the inverted bottle of sope leys. (1766)"

(1766.14) C. LeadbetterRoyal Gauger (ed. 6) ii. ix. 333 "The Commissioners of the Customs are to pay into the Exchequer the remaining Part of the Produce of such Seizure made by the Officers of the Customs. (1766)"

(1766.15) Goldsm.Vic. W. iii, "Out of fourteen thousand pounds we had but four hundred remaining. (1766)"

(1766.16) J. BartramJrnl. 11 Feb. in Stork Acc. E. Florida 65 "There still remain..great trees girdled round to kill them, which are now very sound, tho' above 60 years since they were cut. (1766)"

(1766.17) PornyElem. Heraldry v. (1777) 140 "Had it not been for the singular conduct of this brave person, the King had then remained a prisoner. (1766)"

(1766.18) PennantZool. (1768) I. 41 "Those remains which fossilists distinguish by the title of diluvian. (1766)"

(1766.19) PennantZool. (1768) I. 41 "Remains which fossilists distinguish by the title of diluvian. (1766)"

(1766.20) PennantZool. (1768) II. 424 "The Winter Mew..The gelatinous substance, known by the name of Star Shot, or Star Gelly, owes its origin to this bird,..being nothing but the half digested remains of earth-worms, on which these birds feed. (1766)"

(1766.21) SmollettTrav. II. 228 "The remains of two galleries one over another; and two vomitoria or great gateways at opposite sides of the arena. (1766)"

(1766.22) Compl. Farmer s.v. Hemp Z 4/2 "The seed..which remains in the heads of the hemp..is got out by combing the heads on the teeth of a ripple. (1766)"

(1766.23) Compl. Farmer s.v. Malt, "Malt which has not had a sufficient time to shoot, so that its plume, or acrospire as the adepts in malting call it, may have reached to the inward skin of the barley, remains charged with too large a quantity of it's unattenuated oils. (1766)"

(1766.24) Compl. Farmer s.v. Fence, "If they have proceeded from apple-kernels, they may remain ungrafted. (1766)"

(1767.1) BlackstoneComm. II. 169 "Contingent or executory remainders are where the estate in remainder is limited to take effect, either to a dubious and uncertain person, or upon a dubious and uncertain event; so that the particular estate may chance to be determined, and the remainder never take effect. (1767)"

(1767.3) BlackstoneComm. II. 163 "Of expectancies there are two sorts; one..called a remainder; the other..called a reversion. (1767)"

(1767.4) BlackstoneComm. II. 173 "That by this means a remainder may be limited of a chattel interest, after a particular estate for life created in the same. (1767)"

(1767.5) BlackstoneComm. II. xii. 184 "While it [the joint-tenancy] continues, each of two joint-tenants has a concurrent interest in the whole; and therefore, on the death of his companion, the sole interest in the whole remains to the survivor. (1767)"

(1767.7) GoochTreat. Wounds I. 307 "In some parts of the skull, there is naturally very little Dipl&ouml.e, and in old subjects, scarce any remains. (1767)"

(1767.8) H. WalpoleNarr. Rousseau 133 "He changed the construction of the last phrase, though the thought remained exactly the same. (1767)"

(1767.9) Junius Lett. xxxv. 166 "What..remains, but to leave it to the people to determine for themselves?.. They alone ought to determine. (1767)"

(1768.1) BlackstoneComm. III. 448 "There may be also a bill of revivor, when the suit is abated by the death of any of the parties; in order to set the proceedings again in motion, without which they remain at a stand. (1768)"

(1768.5) W. MusgraveLet. 12 Feb. in 15th Rep. R. Comm. Hist. Manuscripts App. vi. 241 in Parl. Papers 1897 (C. 8551) LI. i. 1 "But if they will be artful enough to throw their votes so as to choose one of your candidates, it is my opinion we ought to remain contented for the present. (1768)"

(1768.6) Acad. of Play 83 "He who looks at the cards that remain in the Stock is beasted. (1768)"

(1768.7) Woman of Honor II. 208, "I had chosen..my Aunt Clifford's..there to remain in recess for some time. (1768)"

(1768.8) Woman of Honor II. 159 "No remains of her former notions of mis-alliance, interfere to lessen her present vexation. (1768)"

(1768.9) in Extracts Minutes Yearly Meeting Friends, London (1783) 269 "This meeting directs, that the 11th query remain as it now stands. (1768)"

(1768-74.2) TuckerLt. Nat. (1834) I. 12 "The qualities of fire remain the same, whether you throw gold or clay into it; yet upon casting in the latter no liquefaction will ensue. (1768-"

(1769.1) BlackstoneComm. IV. xxvii. 343 "The liberties of England cannot but subsist, so long as this palladium [trial by jury] remains sacred and inviolate. (1769)"

(1769.2) BlackstoneComm. IV. 13 "If a man maliciously should put out the remaining eye of him who had lost one before, it is too slight a punishment for the maimer to lose only one of his. (1769)"

(1769.3) BlackstoneComm. IV. xv. 219 "The other remaining offence, that of kid&dubh.napping, being the forcible abduction or stealing away of man, woman, or child from their own country, and selling them into another. (1769)"

(1769.5) CookVoy. round World ii. ii. (1773) 311 "Those who remained in the canoes traded with our people very fairly. (1769)"

(1769.6) FalconerDict. Marine (1780), "Slack-water, the interval between the flux and reflux of the tide;..during which..the water apparently remains in a state of rest. (1769)"

(1769.7) FalconerDict. Marine (1789) "*Boat-Keeper, one of the rowers, who remains..to take care of any boat. (1769)"

(1769.8) FalconerDict. Marine (1780), "Rough-tree, a name given in merchant-ships to any mast, yard, or boom, placed as a rail or fence above the ship's side, from the quarter-deck to the fore-castle. It is, however, with more propriety, applied to any mast, &amp.c. which remains rough and unfinished. (1769)"

(1769.14) De Foe's Tour Gt. Brit. (ed. 7) I. 161 "This ancient Remain is situated about a Quarter of a Mile to the right of the great Road leading from Rochester to Maidstone. (1769)"

(1769-76.1) FalconerDict. Mar., "Palm, paumet,..is formed of a piece of leather or canvas, on the middle of which is fixed a round plate of iron, of an inch in diameter, whose surface is pierced with a number of small holes, to catch the head of the sail-needle. The leather is formed so as to encircle the hand, and button on the back thereof, while the iron remains in the palm. (1769-"

(1770.1) J. BanksJrnl. 28 Apr. 264 "During this time, a few of the Indians [sc. Australian Aboriginals]..remained on the rocks opposite the ship, threatening and menacing with their pikes and swords. (1770)"

(1770.2) FooteLame Lover ii. Wks. 1799 II. 71 "Jack. But then how comes the note to remain in plaintiff's possession? Serj. Well put, Jack; but we have a salvo for that. (1770)"

(1770.3) Goldsm.Des. Vill. 180 "Fools, who came to scoff, remained to pray. (1770)"

(1773.1) A. JonesArt Skittle Playing 16 "The next in height and value [to the king or middle pin] were the four corner pins..these were called Dukes, Lords, and Nobles... These four counted for three each when tipped by the King or his consequents, but if by the bowl or any other from it, either of their own height or lower, they only counted for two each. The remaining four were called Common,..and counted for two each when tipped by the King, but by any other only one each. (1773)"

(1773.2) G. WhiteSelborne, To Pennant 9 Nov., "Wagtails, all sorts, remain with us all the winter. (1773)"

(1773.3) Goldsm.1st Epil. to `Stoops to Conq.', "And that our friendship may remain unbroken, What if we leave the Epilogue unspoken? " (1773)"

(1773.5) J. SmithHist. Sk. Relief Ch. 41 "The Burgher clergy maintained that it [the Synod] remained in their society, while the Antiburghers endeavoured to prove that they carried it away with them to Mr. Gibb's manse. (1773)"

(1773.6) JohnsonLet. to Boswell 24 [22] Feb., "Some superfluities I have expunged, and some faults I have corrected,..but the main fabrick of the work remains as it was. (1773)"

(1773.7) Johnson (ed. 4) "Remove, a dish to be changed while the rest of the course remains. (1773)"

(1773.8) W. WalesJrnl. 31 Aug. in Cook Jrnls. (1961) II. 796 "With regard to the Personal Beauties of the Otahitean Ladies, I believe it would be most prudent to remain entirely silent. (1773)"

(1773.9) Gentl. Mag. XLIII. 230 "The remains of a stone tower, which I apprehend to be a Druidic work. (1773)"

(1773.10) Gentl. Mag. XLIII. 199 "It will be more beneficial to the public and the East India Company, to let the territorial acquisitions remain in the possession of the Company for a limited time. (1773)"

(1774.1) BryantMythol. I. 164 "This accretion will be in every age enlarged; till there will at last remain some few outlines only of the original occurrence. (1774)"

(1774.2) FergussonFarmer's Ingle (1845) 38 "In its auld lerroch yet the deas remains, Where the guidman aft streeks him at his ease. (1774)"

(1776.2) G. WilsonCoke's Rep. iii. II. 26 "If lands be given to husband and wife in tail, or in fee, and the husband dies, there the wife cannot devest the freehold out of her by any verbal waver... As if before any entry made by her, she saith that she utterly waves and disagrees to the said estate,..yet the freehold remains in her. (1776)"

(1776.4) GibbonDecl. &amp. F. xii. I. 334 "The remaining actions he intrusted to the care of his lieutenants. (1776)"

(1776.5) G. SempleBuilding in Water 150 "The remaining Part of its recoiling Force.. will be quite swallowed up in that Depth of Water. (1776)"

(1776.6) MickleCamoens' Lusiad p. xxxvii, "They remained unmoveable on the shore till the fleet..evanished from their sight. (1776)"

(1776.7) PaineCom. Sense (1791) 49 "Every day wears out the little remains of kindred between us and them. (1776)"

(1776.8) Battle of Brooklyn ii. i. 19 "We are the remains of the out post guard. (1776)"

(1776.9) Trial of Nundocomar 68/1 "You have for a long time had my money; it shall remain no longer with you. (1776)"

(1776.10) Trial of Nundocomar 68/1 "You have for a long time had my money; it shall remain no longer with you. (1776)"

(1776.11) Trial Nundocomar 45/1 "The copy I wrote remained with..Nundocomar; the original remained with Pudmohun Doss. (1776)"

(1777.1) BurkeLet. to Sheriffs of Bristol Wks. III. 143 "If..we..contend that you may justly reserve for vengeance, those who remain unexchanged. (1777)"

(1777.2) H. BlairSerm. (1780) II. 70 "Temper is the disposition which remains after these emotions are past; and which forms the habitual propensity of the soul. (1777)"

(1777.3) Potter&Ae.AElig;schylus, Prometh. Chain'd Foreword, "There is in this remaining drama a sublimity of conception, a strength, a fire, a certain savage dignity peculiar to this bold writer. (1777)"

(1777.4) PennantBrit. Zool. (ed. 4) IV. 9 "Doctor Baster..counted 12,444 eggs under the tail, besides those that remained in the body unprotruded. (1777)"

(1778.1) Maseres in Phil. Trans. LXVIII. 920 "The remaining case of the cubick equation..which..cannot be resolved by the rules above mentioned, has..obtained amongst algebraists the name of the irreducible case: at least it is often called by the French writers of algebra le cas irr&eacu.ductible. (1778)"

(1780.7) EdmondsonHer. II, "Voided, is a term applied to any ordinary, as a fesse, chevron, pale, etc. when it is pierced through, so that the field appears, and nothing remains of the charge but its edge. (1780)"

(1780.8) MadanThelyph. I. 3 "It is not impossible but that the light of that great reformer had remained hidden under the bushel of monkery. (1780)"

(1781.7) GibbonDecl. &amp. Fall. III. 139 "The invasion of the Goths..contributed, at least accidentally, to extirpate the last remains of Paganism. (1781)"

(1781.8) JustamondPriv. Life Lewis XV, IV. 9 "After having been at once a husband, a brother, and a father, he was the only remains of his family, which was entirely buried in the grave along with him. (1781)"

(1781.9) Ledwich in Vallancey Collect. de Rebus Hibern. II. 446 "The arms were broken, but the shaft [of the market cross of Kilkenny] remained adorned with beautiful figures. (1781)"

(1782.2) PriestleyCorrupt. Chr. vi. II. 42 "Innocent the third acknowledged that, after consecration, there did remain in the elements a certain paneity and vineity, as he called them, which satisfied hunger and thirst. (1782)"

(1784.4) CookThird Voy. vi. iv. III. 269 "The only part of the Russian empire that now remains unascertained. (1784)"

(1784.5) J. BarryLect. Art vi. (1848) 226 "Amidst all his [Titian's] dashing and slobbering, there is still remaining [etc.]. (1784)"

(1784.6) KingVoy. (1790) V. 1712 "We remained several days beating up, but in vain, to regain our former birth. (1784)"

(1785.1) BurkeSp. Nabob of Arcot's Debts Wks. IV. 286 "The remaining miserable last cultivator, who grows to the soil, after having his back scored by the farmer, has it again flayed by the whip of the assignee. (1785)"

(1786.4) H. Cavendish in Phil. Trans. LXXVI. 268 "The oil of vitriol prepared from green vitriol, has sometimes been obtained in such a state as to remain constantly congealed..whence it acquired its name of glacial. (1786)"

(1788.7) T. TaylorProclus I. Dissert. p. li, "Do you by this means destroy the equality of its angles to two right ones? Certainly not;-take away its scalenity, yet this general affection remains. (1788)"

(1788.9) W. Eden in G. Rose's Diaries (1860) I. 74 "There remained merely the finding and grabbing some respectable office for life. (1788)"

(1788.10) WesleyWks. (1872) VII. 79 "Indented servants, who are legally engaged to remain with you for a term of years. (1788)"

(1789.1) A. YoungJrnl. 8 June in Trav. France (1792) I. 103 "If..by the verification of their powers in one chamber, they shall once come together, the popular party hope that there will remain, no power afterwards to separate. (1789)"

(1789.2) BurnsUpon seeing a wounded hare, "Go, live, poor wanderer of the wood and field, The bitter little that of life remains. (1789)"

(1791.8) Mrs. RadcliffeRom. Forest viii, "Had I resigned you to his will I should have remained secure. (1791)"

(1791.9) MackintoshVind. Gallic&ae.aeig; i. (1837) 44 "The Commons, faithful to their system, remained in a wise and masterly inactivity, which tacitly reproached the arrogant assumption of the Nobles. (1791)"

(1791.10) Mrs. RadcliffeRom. Forest ii, "The remains of tapestry hung in tatters upon the walls. (1791)"

(1794.18) T. TaylorPausanias's Descr. Greece III. 48 "In the temple of Promachos the remains of a purslain&dubh.tree are dedicated. (1794)"

(1794.19) W. TindalHist. Evesham 31 "It is difficult to conceive..that it should have remained long undedicated after being built. (1794)"

(1794.20) W. HutchinsonHist. Cumbld. I. 378 "Whereupon it was adjudged that the title remained unattainted. (1794)"

(1794.21) Rigging &amp. Seamanship 55 "Mail, to rub off the loose hemp that remains on white cordage, is a kind of steel chain-work, flat, and fastened upon leather, about nine-inches long and seven-inches broad. (1794)"

(1794.22) Stat. Acc. Scotl. XI. 528 (Westerkirk) "There is a great number of burians in this parish. These are all of a circular form, and are from 36 to 50 yards diameter. They are supposed by some to be remains of Pictish encampments. (1794)"

(1794-8.1) HutchinsonHist. Cumbld. (Halliwell), "There are yet some considerable remains of stones which still go by the name of raises. (1794-"

(1795.4) Pitt in T. Browne British Cicero (1808) I. 524 "That after reading the riot act, and ordering them to disperse, any number of persons remaining should, as by the riot act, incur the penalty of the law, that of felony. (1795)"

(1795.5) SoutheyJoan of Arc vi. 388 "What few to guard the town Unwilling had remained, haste forth to meet The triumph. (1795)"

(1795.7) Wolcot (P. Pindar) Pindariana Wks. 1812 IV. 180 "Nay while a *mutton-light remains A sun with us no credit gains But yields to every Farthing Candle. (1795)"

(1795-1814.1) Wordsw.Excurs. v. 386 "How few who mingle with their fellow-men And still remain self-governed, and apart. (1795-"

(1796.1) BurkeRegic. Peace Wks. 1842 II. 355 "His protest against binding him to his opinions, and his reservation of a right to whatever opinions he pleases, remain in their full force. This variability is pleasant, and shews a fertility of fancy. (1796)"

(1796.2) ColeridgeBiog. Lit. (1847) II. 365 "Though not right in itself, it may become right by the greater wrongness of the only alternative-the remaining in neediness and uncertainty. (1796)"

(1796.15) PeggeAnonym. (1809) 183 "*Peg-Tankards, of which I have seen a few still remaining in Derbyshire,..hold two quarts, so that there is a gill of ale, i.e. half a pint Winchester measure, between each pin. (1796)"

(1796.16) SoutheyLett. Spain &amp. Port. (1799) 140 "His boarship remained unhurt, and was suffered to go to his den. (1796)"

(1796.17) SoutheyLett. fr. Spain (1808) I. App. 288 "Whatever remains of such Catholic sufferers she could procure she shrined with her own hands,..and she labelled the relicaries in which they were placed. (1796)"

(1796.19) T. TwiningTrav. India, etc. (1893) 355 "The ship remained under nearly the same sail for many days,..rolling from one side to the other, the wind being directly astern. This is called `rolling down to St. Helena' by the captains of Indiamen. (1796)"

(1796.20) T. TwiningTrav. Amer. (1894) 136 "General Washington..remained there till 1789, when the general voice of his country called him from his pastoral pursuits to the Presidency of the Government. (1796)"

(1797.6) S. &amp. Ht. LeeCanterb. T. (1799) I. 373 "The recital he was about to make remained unfinished. (1797)"

(1797.7) S. LysonsRom. Antiq. Woodchester 16 "The remains of a Roman house, or rather, perhaps, of a villa. (1797)"

(1797.8) Encycl. Brit. IV. 81/1 "The inhabitants are chiefly Spaniards; though there are some of the first people remaining, whom they call Guanches, who are somewhat civilized by their intercourse with the Spaniards. (1797)"

(1797.10) Encycl. Brit. (ed. 3) VI. 673 "The sal enixum of Paracelsus is the caput mortuum of spirits of nitre with oil of vitriol, or what remains in the retort after the distillation of this spirit. (1797)"

(1797.11) Encycl. Brit. (ed. 3) XVIII. 917/1 "The most ancient remains of writing..are upon hard substances, such as stones and metals. (1797)"

(1797.12) Encycl. Brit. (ed. 3) XVI. 140/2 "In the city of Salino are still to be seen remains of some walls, evidently of Roman origin from the reticulum. (1797)"

(1798.1) Craig in Owen Wellesley's Desp. (1877) 599 "It will then remain to proportion its several parts into the different branches. (1798)"

(1799.3) De Serra in Phil. Trans. LXXXIX. 151 "Impressions or remains of plants..by more ancient and less enlightened oryctologists, supposed to belong to plants actually growing in temperate and cold climates. (1799)"

(1799.15) Aurora (Philad.) 31 Jan. (Th.), "The gulls and goose-traps that have been sported for some time past all come from the shop in which the Washington Lottery wheels remain undrawn, and where a new goose-trap, the Amuskeag canal, was some time since hammered out. (1799)"

(1799.16) Chron. in Ann. Reg. 67/1 "The primateship will remain vacant for two years. (1799)"

(1799.17) Med. Jrnl. II. 371 "An elevated smooth brown scab remained..upon each of the children's arms, after all discharge from the part had ceased. (1799)"

(1800.7) Mrs. HerveyMourtray Fam. III. 134 "His estate of 1200l. a year went to nurse; and a small allowance from his creditors..remained for the maintenance of his family. (1800)"

(1800.8) Southey in C. Southey Life II. 72 "One who can let his feelings remain awake, and opiate his reason. (1800)"

(1800.9) Wordsw.Michael 481 "The remains Of the unfinished Sheep-fold may be seen Beside the boisterous brook of Greenhead Ghyll. (1800)"

(1800.10) W. TookeHist. Russia I. i. 13 "Komanes. They were neighbours of the Madshares or Ugres, and migrated in conjunction with them at the close of the eighth century to Pannonia. They dwelt upon the river Kuma, from which they also had their name. On the other side of the Terek is still a people named Kumuiks; perhaps remains of the old Kumanians. (1800)"

(1800.11) Asiatic Ann. Reg. 26/2 "He remained undistinguished for any thing, except the infamous action, in which [etc.]. (1800)"

(1800.18) tr. Lagrange's Chem. I. 89 "Carbonic acid gas..is not condensed at that degree of pressure and of temperature of the atmosphere in which we live. It remains in the state of gas. (1800)"

(1800.19) tr. Lagrange's Chem. II. 84 "There remains a whitish-grey mass, which formerly was called Vitriol Calcined to Whiteness. If you distil it in a retort, and collect the product, you will have first, a water slightly acid, called Dew of Vitriol. (1800)"

(1802.3) C. JamesMilit. Dict. s.v., "Capitaine en Second..Lieutenant en Second..are officers whose companies have been reduced, but who do duty in others, and are destined to fill up the first vacancies. We have borrowed the expression and say, To be seconded. When an officer is seconded, he remains upon full pay, his rank goes on, and he may purchase the next vacant step, without being obliged to memorial in a manner that a half-pay officer must. (1802)"

(1802.4) C. JamesMilit. Dict., "Mouser, an ironical term, which is sometimes used in the British militia to distinguish battalion men from the flank companies. It is indeed generally applied to them by the grenadiers and light bobs, meaning, that while the latter are detached, the former remain in quarters, like cats, to watch the mice, &amp.c. (1802)"

(1802.11) W. ForsythFruit Trees (1824) 214 "If any of the old dead snags remain they should be cut off close to the quick wood. (1802)"

(1802.12) Med. Jrn. VIII. 318 "These phenomena, however, only take place the moment the Galvanic chain is shut, or when it is suffered to remain shut..If the opposite action, occasioned at the moment the chain is separated, had entirely supplanted..the former. (1802)"

(1802.13) Med. &amp. Phys. Jrnl. VIII. 368 "The Mollusca..have all the remainder of the common bundle of nerves..contained in the same cavity with the other viscera. (1802)"

(1803.3) Nelson 3 June in Nicolas Disp. (1845) V. 78 "You are..on no account..to supply any of his Majesty's Ships..with Naval Stores without being furnished with the Boatswain's and Carpenter's Supplies, Expenses, and Remains. (1803)"

(1803.4) W. Taylor in Monthly Mag. XV. 321 "Nothing would remain tenable..but the system of the idealists. (1803)"

(1803.5) Wellington in Gurw. Desp. (1837) II. 396 "He there remained..without throwing away his ammunition excepting when he could do it with effect in judicious sallies. (1803)"

(1803.6) Ann. Rev. I. 275 "What remains unexplicable in the conduct of public men is not solved by conjecture. (1803)"

(1803.7) Censor 1 Sept. 100 "There is something..so moving in the narrative, that I think it is impossible any reader, however stoical, can remain unaffected. (1803)"

(1803.8) Censor 1 Nov. 126, "I thrust my sweetheart into the coal-cellar... I flattered myself that he could remain unseen in some corner of that large reservoir. (1803)"

(1803.9) Chron. in Ann. Reg. 468/2 "The *mooring-stones remained perfectly steady as did all the ships that were properly moored. (1803)"

(1803.10) Med. Jrnl. 520 "The patients..endeavoured to get up, and to remain out of bed. (1803)"

(1803.11) Med. Jrnl. X. 566 "If the anterior part of the capsula remain,..the needle is retracted from the lens. (1803)"

(1803.12) Phil. Trans. XCV. 152, "I mentioned the probability that there existed..unenlightened stars (if I may be allowed the expression) that have ever remained in eternal darkness. (1803)"

(1803.13) in Gurw. Wellington's Desp. (1844) I. 585 "If you are resolved on having an audience, come tomorrow, when only two ghurees of the day shall remain. (1803)"

(1803-1810.1) JamesMilitary Dict. s.v., "That these detenus (we are borne out by the public prints for using the term) would remain as hostages to secure to men in open rebellion all the rights and privileges of fair warriors. (1803-"

(1804.1) AbernethySurg. Obs. 124 "Sinuses remained where the abscesses had been. (1804)"

(1804.3) G. RoseDiaries (1860) II. 134 "Lord Charles Spencer should be allowed to remain in the other joint Postmastership. (1804)"

(1804.4) LarwoodNo Gun Boats 12 "Better to give all than suffer their Gun Boats to remain in even an unruddered, unmasted, unordonanced existence. (1804)"

(1804.5) LarwoodNo Gun Boats 12 "Better to give all than suffer their Gun Boats to remain in even an unruddered, unmasted, unordonanced existence. (1804)"

(1804.6) Nelson 22 Mar. in Nicolas Disp. (1845) V. 471 "Seahorse being in want of wood, to be ordered..to the Island of Asinara, to cut wood, for which purpose she may remain forty-eight hours. In much less time the Victory could be wooded. (1804)"

(1804.7) SoutheyLet. to Coleridge 11 June, "And so unplastered it [sc. a room] is likely to remain another winter. (1804)"

(1804.8) Wellington in Gurw. Desp. (1837) III. 497 "If the British Government had remained..a tacit spectator of events. (1804)"

(1804.9) Europ. Mag. XLV. 347/2 "The above remarks do not apply to what I shall call collections of legitimate remains. (1804)"

(1805.6) M. Lewis in Lewis &amp. Clark Exped. (1904) II. 220, "I dispatched Sergt. Ordway with 4 Canoes and 8 men to take up a load of baggage as far as Capt. Clark's camp and return for the remainder of our plunder. (1805)"

(1805.7) R. W. DicksonPract. Agric. II. 1042 "Manure..blanching and tendering the grass plants in the spots where it remains. (1805)"

(1806.4) HorsleySerm. xvii. (1816) II. 68 "As the inquiry is of the highest importance, and spontaneously presents itself, it is to this that I shall devote the remainder of the present discourse. (1806)"

(1806.5) Home in Phil. Trans. XCVI. 359 "In the common mode of pithing cattle the medulla spinalis only is cut through, and the head remains alive. (1806)"

(1807.7) SoutheyEspriella's Lett. III. 339 "All night I remained wakeful-not in that state of feverish startlishness which the expectation of an early call occasions, but [etc.]. (1807)"

(1807.8) T. ThomsonChem. (ed. 3) II. 329 "This powder was called Prussian blue; and the method of procuring it remained concealed, because it had become a lucrative article of commerce, till Dr. Woodward published a process in the Philosophical Transactions for 1724. (1807)"

(1807.9) T. YoungLect. Nat. Phil. I. 140 "Torsion, or twisting, consists in the lateral displacement, or detrusion, of the opposite parts of a solid, in opposite directions, the central particles only remaining in their natural state. (1807)"

(1807.10) VancouverAgric. Devon (1813) 84 "Enabling the widow of the last surviving tenant to the church&dubh.lands in possession, to hold over the estate so long as she remained unmarried. (1807)"

(1808.7) W. Taylor in Monthly Mag. XXVI. 111 "The police of the metropolis is already curious..enough: without employing new ferrets to scrab the remaining pleasures out of their skulking-holes. (1808)"

(1808.8) W. HerbertElla Rosenberg I. 136 "`No!' exclaimed the count... `I will remain in my castle. If I perish here, at least they will not streate my castle from my posterity!'" (1808)"

(1808-25.1) Jamieson, "Twa part, twaparte, two thirds... This mode of expression is still quite common... The twa part and third, i.e., two thirds, and the remaining one. (1808-"

(1808-79.1) JamiesonDict. s.v., "To tak a farm in a bowin, to take a lease of a farm in grass, with the life stock on it; this still remaining the property of the landholder, or person who lets it. Ayrs. (1808-"

(1809.1) ColeridgeFriend 161 "My feelings..and imagination did not remain unkindled in this general conflagration. (1809)"

(1810.11) Sporting Mag. XXXVI. 153 "The remains of this once celebrated character are permitted to remain without any monumentary token of respect. (1810)"

(1810-26.1) HenryElem. Chem. II. 332 "Olivile is a name given by M. Pelletier to the substance which remains after gently evaporating the alcoholic solution of the gum which exudes from the olive tree. (1810-"

(1811.1) ColeridgeLect. (1856) 45 "When the whole pleasure received is derived from an unexpected turn of expression, then I call it wit; but when the pleasure is produced..by an image which remains with us..I call it fancy. (1811)"

(1811.3) ListonPerfect Intonation 27 "The Euharmonic Organ is contrived..to enable the musician..to produce harmony absolutely perfect, while the keyboard remains the same as before. (1811)"

(1811.4) PinkertonPetral. II. 370 "The under current continues to flow; so that upon its complete elapse, the space remains void. (1811)"

(1811.5) PinkertonPetral. I. 599 "It now remains to attempt a clear classification and description of the Accidential. (1811)"

(1811.6) PinkertonPetral. I. Introd., "The remaining six domains, derived from circumstances or accidences, are..8. The Diamictonic, or rocks in which the substances are so completely mingled, that it is difficult..to pronounce which preponderates. (1811)"

(1811.8) T. DavisAgric. Wilts i. x. 88 "Young trees must be planted, part of which may be preserved for timber, and the remainder left to be stubbed off for underwood. (1811)"

(1811.9) Regul. &amp. Orders Army 214 "The Nature of the Claims of any Man which remain unsettled. (1811)"

(1812.1) BrackenridgeJrnl. in Views Louisiana (1814) 203 "A kind of scaffolds, ten or fifteen feet in height, which I was informed were erected..by the neighboring settlers for the purpose of shooting the deer by moon light... The hunter ascends the scaffold, and remains until the deer approaches. (1812)"

(1812.2) BrackenridgeViews Louisiana (1814) 176 "The soil of Louisiana is the most fertile in the world, the climate delightful during nine months of the year, and bad the remainder, only from being irreclaimed. (1812)"

(1812.5) J. SmythPract. of Customs (1821) 282 "A paling Board is the outside or sappy part of a tree, sawed off from the four sides, in order to make the remaining part square. (1812)"

(1812.6) J. H. VauxFlash Dict., "Trig, a bit of stick, paper, &amp.c., placed by thieves in the keyhole of..the door of a house, which they suspect to be uninhabited; if the trig remains unmoved the following day, it is a proof that no person sleeps in the house. This..is called trigging the jigger. (1812)"

(1812.7) L. Hunt in Examiner 25 May 321/1 "The remains of the Pittite Cabinet. (1812)"

(1812.15) Oxoniana I. 5 "Some traces of this practice [disputationes in Augustinensibus] still remain in the University exercises, and the common phrase of scholars `doing Austins' has a direct allusion to it. (1812)"

(1813.8) Sir H. DavyAgric. Chem. (1814) 192 "Rocks are generally divided by geologists into two grand divisions, distinguished by the names of primary and secondary... The secondary rocks, or strata, consist only partly of crystalline matter; contain fragments of other rocks or strata; often abound in the remains of vegetables and marine animals; and sometimes contain the remains of land animals. (1813)"

(1814.2) KebleOccas. Papers (1877) 154 "There remain two sorts of imitation instrumental to Poetry: indirect, by which the style and structure takes the colour of the subject; and direct. (1814)"

(1814.3) Miss AustenLady Susan xxxviii. (1879) 282 "It is impossible to submit to such an extremity while another alternative remains. (1814)"

(1814.4) M. BirkbeckNotes Journey through France App. 14 "The numerous longitudinal ridges..with which this charming country is, `parsem&eacu.', appear to be the venerable remains of the ancient surface. (1814)"

(1815.14) T. R. MalthusInquiry Nature &amp. Progress Rent 1 "The rent of land may be defined to be that portion of the value of the whole produce which remains to the owner of the land, after all the out&dubh.goings belonging to its cultivation..have been paid, including the profits of the capital employed, estimated according to the usual and ordinary rate of the profits of agricultural stock at the time being. (1815)"

(1815.15) T. JeffersonWrit. (1830) IV. 247 "Disgraced by an association in opposition with the remains of Bonaparteism. (1815)"

(1815.17) W. PhillipsOutl. Min. &amp. Geol. (1818) 88 "The term formation is not always used to express a deposite consisting only of a single stratum..it is also commonly used to designate a series of..strata, which being intimately associated, and containing the same description of organic remains, are thence..considered to be of contemporaneous formation. (1815)"

(1815.18) Ann. Philos. VI. 114 "The trappers have seats near their doors, and remain by them all the time the pit is at work. (1815)"

(1815.19) Edin. Rev. XXV. 99 "The scorified remains of a current of lava. (1815)"

(1815.20) Niles' Weekly Reg. IX. 18/1 "Those not immediately engaged in reciting to some one or other of the professors, remain in their own chambers. (1815)"

(1816.1) ByronSiege Cor. viii, "Given to none, Had young Francesca's hand remain'd Still by the church's bonds unchain'd. (1816)"

(1816.3) ByronPrisoner of Chillon ii, "That iron is a cankering thing, For in these limbs its teeth remain, With marks that will not wear away. (1816)"

(1816.4) J. ScottVis. Paris 239 "The remains found in the tomb of Childeric, were chiefly gold bees, from which Buonaparte took the hint of covering his mantle..with representations of that insect. (1816)"

(1816.6) JeffersonWrit. (1830) IV. 297 "If histories so unlike..can..be brought to the same tally, no line of distinction remains between fact and fancy. (1816)"

(1816.7) J. SmithPanorama Sci. &amp. Art II. 435 "Distil off a part of the acid, till what remains in the retort has the consistence of sirup. (1816)"

(1816.8) Kirby &amp. Sp.Entomol. (1843) I. 53 "Pup&ae.aeig; which are not excluded from the skin of the larva, but remain concealed under it, and were hence called by Linn&eacu. coarctate pup&ae.aeig;. (1816)"

(1816.9) M. GreenleafDistrict of Maine 71 "The remainder [is held] by different individuals, who have purchased solely with a view to the profit of resales. (1816)"

(1816.10) R. KerrAgric. Surv. Berwicksh. 334 (Jam.) "Remains of ancient oak forests..which have grown into a kind of copse, or what is termed in Scotland hag woods. (1816)"

(1816.11) R. JamesonChar. Min. (1817) 301 "Evanescent, when the colour remains as long as the mineral is in a state of fusion, but disappears on cooling. (1816)"

(1816.12) ScottOld Mort. xi, "To remain together in arms for furthering the covenanted work of reformation. (1816)"

(1816.13) Sir J. Sinclair in Monthly Mag. XLII. 298 "The fructiform productions which were found upon the same stalks often remained fixed together. (1816)"

(1816.14) T. L. PeacockHeadlong Hall vii, "The remaining one wallows in all the redundancies of luxury. (1816)"

(1817.1) BenthamParl. Reform (1818) 77 "So long, in a word, as it shall be my lot to remain alive, unkilled, and unbastiled. (1817)"

(1817.2) ColeridgeBiog. Lit. i. (1882) 5 "The great works of past ages..in respect to which his faculties must remain passive and submiss. (1817)"

(1817.3) ColeridgeBiog. Lit. 55 "Of the Hebrew..the remainder seemed to be in the Rabbinical dialect. (1817)"

(1817.4) ColeridgeBiog. Lit. I. x. 203, "I read through..the most important remains of the Theotiscan, or the transitional state of the Teutonic language from the Gothic to the old German of the Swabian period. (1817)"

(1817.5) ColeridgeBiog. Lit. 217 "In a poem, the characters of which, amid the strongest individualization, must still remain representative. (1817)"

(1817.6) CobbettWks. VI. 31 "A Sinecure, which you have secured for your Son,..who is (if all remains tight) to enjoy it for his life after your death. (1817)"

(1817.17) ScottWaverley II. xix. 293 "Proceed as we accorded before dinner, if you wish to remain longer in my service. (1817)"

(1817.18) W. SelwynLaw Nisi Prius (ed. 4) II. 1126 "It will follow, that so long as the cause remains in the county court, the plaintiff may replevy the distress after non-suit there. (1817)"

(1817.19) W. SelwynNisi Prius (ed. 4) II. 882 "To constitute a stranding it is essential that the vessel should be stationary; the striking on a rock where the vessel remains for a minute and a half only, is not a stranding, though she thereby receives an injury, which eventually proves fatal. (1817)"

(1817.20) KeatsLet. c 21 Dec. (1958) I. 193, "I had not a dispute but a disquisition, with Dilke, on various subjects; several things dovetailed in my mind, &amp. at once it struck me, what quality went to form a Man of Achievement especially in Literature &amp. which Shakespeare possessed so enormously-I mean Negative Capability, that is when man is capable of being in uncertainties, Mysteries, doubts without any irritable reaching after fact &amp. reason-Coleridge, for instance, would let go by a fine isolated verisimilitude caught from the Penetralium of mystery, from being incapable of remaining content with half knowledge. (1817)"

(1818.1) ByronLet. to Rogers 3 March, "They are marrying the remaining singleness of the royal family. (1818)"

(1818.2) BenthamCh. Eng. Introd. 63 "A course which,-after substraction made of all punishment and all reward..would remain no less open to rulers than to subjects. (1818)"

(1818.3) CruiseDigest (ed. 2) II. 125 "If a mortgage becomes irredeemable by this statute, it will remain so in the hands of an assignee. (1818)"

(1818.4) CruiseDigest (ed. 2) II. 401 "The estate that was in them, was, by the statute, wholly transferred to serve the uses which were in esse, with a pregnancy and prospect to the contingent remainders, if they should arise in due time. (1818)"

(1818.5) CruiseDigest (ed. 2) I. 214 "That the whole annuity, by an equitable marshalment, shall be thrown upon the two remaining thirds. (1818)"

(1818.6) CobbettPol. Reg. XXXIII. 8 "What remains of it, is the Rump of the old Committee. (1818)"

(1818.7) CruiseDigest (ed. 2) V. 91 "Every such fine..should be of the same force and effect, as if it had still remained upon record unconsumed or not lost. (1818)"

(1818.8) CruiseDigest (ed. 2) II. 269 "Such remainder is contingent, because it is uncertain which of them will survive. (1818)"

(1818.9) CruiseDigest (ed. 2) VI. 579 "The learned Judges having given their opinion..there is nothing remaining for the consideration of the House. (1818)"

(1818.10) CruiseDigest (ed. 2) IV. 87 "All leases made by tenants for life become absolutely void by their death; so that no..act, by the persons entitled to the remainder or reversion, will operate as a confirmation of them. (1818)"

(1818.16) CruiseDigest (ed. 2) II. 325 "This not being a remainder created by that deed, but a conveyance of the then subsisting reversion or remainder expectant on the death of M. (1818)"

(1818.17) CruiseDigest (ed. 2) VI. 41 "It divests the remainder or reversion,..leaving only in the remainder-man or reversioner a mere right of entry. (1818)"

(1818.18) CruiseDigest (ed. 2) VI. 359 "If a conveyance had been prayed, there must have been a limitation to trustees to preserve contingent remainders. (1818)"

(1818.19) CruiseDigest (ed. 2) V. 25 "The right of the remainder-man, expectant on the determination of the estate tail. (1818)"

(1818.20) CruiseDigest (ed. 2) V. 509 "Although a recovery be a good bar to a remainder for years [etc.]. (1818)"

(1818.21) CruiseDigest (ed. 2) V. 499 "It was still the same residue remaining in the wife, which she had not disposed of before. (1818)"

(1818.22) CruiseDigest (ed. 2) VI. 526 "Alice Higgins devised the premises, being a term for 999 years, to trustees, in trust for herself for life, remainder to H. Higgins her son and Mary his wife. (1818)"

(1818.23) ChittyBills of Exchange (ed. 5) 81 "The several parts of a foreign bill are called a set; each part contains a condition, that it shall be paid, provided the others remain unpaid. (1818)"

(1818.25) CruiseDigest (ed. 2) II. 326 "We are now to consider the time at which it is requisite a contingent remainder should vest in interest. (1818)"

(1818.26) CruiseDigest (ed. 2) II. 354 "The alteration in the particular estate, which would destroy a contingent remainder, must amount to an alteration in its quantity, and not in its quality. (1818)"

(1818.27) CruiseDigest (ed. 2) II. 19 "The estate must go over to the next in remainder. (1818)"

(1818.28) CobbettResid. U.S. (1819) 294 "There remains a very important part of the subject yet undiscussed. (1818)"

(1818.29) CruiseDigest (ed. 2) II. 268 "It is a rule of law..that a remainder must vest, either during the continuance of the preceding estate, or at the very instant of its determination. (1818)"

(1818.30) CruiseDigest (ed. 2) IV. 211 "To the use of himself for life, remainder to his wife for life. (1818)"

(1818.38) CruiseDigest (ed. 2) II. 304 "Thomas Cary devised to Peter Cary and the heirs male of his body, remainder in the same manner to his other sons. (1818)"

(1818.39) ColeridgeFriend I. 335 "That Reason which remains always one and the same, whether it speaks through this or that person. (1818)"

(1818.40) CruiseDigest (ed. 2) II. 328 "It seems that the reversal of a fine by act of parliament will restore a contingent remainder destroyed by that fine. (1818)"

(1818.41) ColebrookeObligations i. iii. 10 "If the agreement bear, that the obligation shall not presently have effect but remain inoperative until the event be certain, the condition is precedent and suspensive; and the conditional obligation is termed a suspensive one. (1818)"

(1818.62) ScottHrt. Midl. x, "To all questions concerning the name or rank of her seducer,..Effie remained mute. (1818)"

(1818.63) ScottBr. Lamm. i, "Remaining behind the curtain unseen, like the ingenious manager of Punch and his wife Joan. (1818)"

(1818.64) ScottHrt. Midl. xviii, "He shall hide himself in a bean-hool if he remains on Scottish ground without my finding him. (1818)"

(1818.65) ScottHrt. Midl. vii, "The persons we have mentioned remained in the strong-room of the prison. (1818)"

(1818.66) ScottHrt. Midl. viii, "The Laird..was ashamed to tax too highly the miserable means of support which remained to the widow Butler. (1818)"

(1818.67) ScottBr. Lamm. xxv, "Your lordship..will experience that the faculty of the present proprietor to entertain his friends is greatly abridged,..the will, I need hardly say, remains the same. (1818)"

(1818.68) T. L. PeacockNightm. Abbey 4 "One morning..`he woke and found his lady dead', and remained a very consolate widower [With humorous reference to disconsolate]. (1818)"

(1818.69) W. PhillipsOutl. Min. &amp. Geol. (ed. 3) 86 "Rocks which include organic remains, must have been formed after the shells they contain; and therefore not being considered primitive, they are by some termed secondary rocks; whence the term used by geologists of primary and secondary formations. (1818)"

(1818-20.1) E. ThompsonCullen's Nosol. Method. (ed. 3) 206 "Vesicles..remain for several days and then pour out a thin ichor. (1818-"

(1819.2) Coleridge in Lit. Rem. (1838) III. 65 "This propriation of a metaphor, namely, forgiveness of sin and abolition of guilt through the redemptive power of Christ's love and of his perfect obedience during his voluntary assumption of humanity,..by transferring the sameness from the consequents to the antecedents is the one point of orthodoxy (so called, I mean) in which I still remain at issue. (1819)"

(1819.3) Hel. M. Williams tr. A. von Humboldt's Pers. Narr. IV. 116 "The famous zamang del Guayre, known throughout the province for the enormous extent of it's branches, which form a hemispheric head five hundred and seventy-six feet in circumference. The zamang is a fine species of mimosa,..The branches extend like an immense umbrella, and bend toward the ground, from which they remain at a uniform distance of twelve or fifteen feet. (1819)"

(1819.4) J. WilsonDict. Astrol. 379 "Stations, those parts in the orbit of a planet where it becomes either retrograde or direct, because it remains for a while there stationary before it changes its course. (1819)"

(1820.2) Bracy ClarkDescr. New Horse Shoe 14 "Nor was there so much trouble in reducing them [the pritchel bumps on the outside of the shoe]..with the pritchel remaining in the hole to prevent its closing. (1820)"

(1820.3) ColeridgeLett., Convers., &amp.c. I. 152 "The contra-distinction between the Shakespearian and the Greek Drama, and its still remaining uniqueness. (1820)"

(1820.4) KeatsLet. 1 Nov. (1931) II. 568, "I should have had her when I was in health, and I should have remained well. (1820)"

(1820.15) W. IrvingSketch-bk. (1859) 34 "This was one point on which he always remained flighty. (1820)"

(1820.16) W. JayPrayers 294 "Yet are they all diminished by another irreparable loss; and the reduced remainder [etc.]. (1820)"

(1820.17) WatertonWand. S. Amer. iii. (1825) 154 "The owls went away of their own accord... The bats and vampires remained with me. (1820)"

(1820.18) W. IrvingSk. Bk., Spectre Bridegroom &page.11 "He was naturally a fuming, bustling little man, and could not remain passive... He worried from top to bottom of the castle with an air of infinite anxiety. (1820)"

(1820.19) W. IrvingSketch-bk. I. 267 "The remains of those saints and monarchs which lie enshrined in the adjoining chapels. (1820)"

(1820.20) Blackw. Mag. Oct. 14 (Jam.) "She had preserved, since the great tea-drinking..the remainder of the two ounces of carvey, bought for that memorable occasion. (1820)"

(1822.1) BeddoesBrides' Trag. iv. ii, "Some vengeance will fall on us in the night If he remain unsentenced. (1822)"

(1822.2) D. JohnsonInd. Field Sports 107 "Not long before this, he [the tiger] must have struck at a porcupine, as several of the quills were still remaining between the joints of one of his fore feet. (1822)"

(1822.3) ImisonSc. &amp. Art II. 127 "Clay is put upon the tops of the conical pots in which the sugar has granulated, which allows water to percolate through, and thus drain off the last remains of the molasses. This is called claying the sugars. (1822)"

(1822-34.2) Good's Study Med. (ed. 4) I. 392 "Diemerbroeck relates the case of a pearl-diver, who, under his own eye remained half-an-hour at a time under water, while pursuing his hunt for pearl muscles. (1822-"

(1823.2) BenthamNot Paul 285 "So long as the predictor lived, it [sc. the prediction] would remain good and undisfulfilled. (1823)"

(1823.3) F. CooperPioneer vii. (1869) 35/2 "The remainder of the party withdrew to an eating parlour. (1823)"

(1823.4) Faraday in Q. Jrnl. Sci., Lit., &amp. Arts 239 "During the condensation of the gas in this manner, a liquid has been observed to deposit from it. It is not, however, a result of the liquefaction of the gas, but the deposition of a vapour (using the terms gas and vapour in their common acceptation) from it, and when taken out of the vessel it remains liquid at common temperatures and pressures. (1823)"

(1823.6) J. WilsonTrials Marg. Lyndsay xxxi, "In which he had not supposed such a capacity of love had yet remained inextinct. (1823)"

(1823.7) J. BadcockDom. Amusem. 151 "Flour, being..exposed to the constant running of water, until it comes off colourless, the gluten will remain. (1823)"

(1823.8) LockhartReg. Dalton i. viii. (1842) 46 "Her wedding-sheet, which, according to the primitive fashion of the district, had been carefully laid by for that purpose, was formed into the shroud which enveloped her remains. (1823)"

(1823.9) MoorSuffolk Words, "Scraps,..the small pieces of fat pork remaining after the operation of boiling for the purpose of extracting the lard. (1823)"

(1823.11) P. NicholsonPract. Build. 589 "Nebule; a zigzag ornament, but without angles, frequently found in the remains of Saxon architecture. (1823)"

(1823.12) W. ScoresbyJrnl. 91 "With the aid of a few observations taken `in stays' the remaining twelve points were likewise determined. (1823)"

(1823.13) Edin. Rev. XXXIX. 73 "Too many of these namby-pamby lyrics have still been allowed to remain. (1823)"

(1824.1) BurchellTrav. II. 99 "One of our party fell in with the fresh remains of a kaama or hartebeest. (1824)"

(1824.2) Col. HawkerShooting (ed. 3) 8 "There are two good ways of boring; the one is, to form a cylinder for about three-fourths of the barrel, and let the remaining part be gradually relieved to the muzzle. (1824)"

(1824.3) J. MackintoshJrnl. 28 Sept. in R. J. Mackintosh Life (1835) II. 415 "Went to see the `Chapelle Ardente' at St. Denis, where the king's remains lie in state. (1824)"

(1824.4) LambElia Ser. ii. Capt. Jackson, "He would sometimes finish the remainder crust, to show that he wished no savings. (1824)"

(1824.8) R. StuartHist. Steam Engine, "The power of the condensing Engine is..known by ascertaining the temperature of the steam, which moves the piston, the area of the piston, and the temperature of the vapour which remains. (1824)"

(1824.9) R. CrabbTales 142 "He became well in his health; but he remained quite a fool for the rest of his life!" (1824)"

(1824.10) T. TeggChron. Introd. 17 "The Cycle of Indiction..was established by Constantine a.d. 312; if therefore from any given year of the Christian era 312 be subtracted and the remainder be divided by 15, the year of this cycle will be obtained. (1824)"

(1824.12) Examiner 650/2, "I must upgather to the strife the reason that remains. (1824)"

(1825.1) BeddoesEpitaph Poems (1851) 203 "This is the remain Of one best union of that deathless twain. (1825)"

(1825.2) BeddoesLet. 4 Dec. in Poems p. li, "It still remains for some one to exhibit the sum of his experience in mental pathology and therapeutics, not in a cold, technical, dead description, but a living semiotical display. (1825)"

(1825.3) Brockett, "Hinder-ends, refuse of corn-such as remains after it is winnowed. (1825)"

(1825.4) BrockettN.C. Gloss., "*Stob-feathers, the short unfledged feathers that remain on a fowl after it has been plucked. (1825)"

(1825.5) C. D. ColdenMem. 93 "Why should the trans-Allegany States have remained united with those on the Atlantic? " (1825)"

(1825.10) J. NicholsonOperat. Mechanic 307 "It..remains for a short period in contact with the surface of the *ink-roller..thereby receiving a portion of ink upon its surface. (1825)"

(1825.11) J. NicholsonOperat. Mechanic 608 "It is absolutely necessary that the lime..be allowed to remain a considerable time macerating or souring in water. (1825)"

(1825.12) J. NicholsonOperat. Mechanic 376 "The pipe G is a sort of gauge, by means of which, after the pulp rises to a proper height in the vessel L, the remainder of the water is carried off into the cistern C. (1825)"

(1825.13) J. NicholsonOperat. Mechanic 407 "He..wets the fibres [of flax or hemp] and rubs them together, which, by the glutine remaining in them will cause them to adhere. (1825)"

(1825.14) J. NicholsonOperat. Mechanic 662 "The whole power of the engine would be expended in impelling itself and the ship..and no free power would remain for freight. (1825)"

(1825.15) J. NicholsonOperat. Mechanic 671 "It appears to us that this point still remains in a very undecided state. (1825)"

(1825.16) LoudonAgric. &sect.2940 "When the single sheaves (gaites) have remained in this position for a few days, if [etc.]. (1825)"

(1825.17) ScottTalism. iv, "I am but the vile and despised sign, which points out to the wearied traveller a harbour of rest and security, but must itself remain for ever without doors. (1825)"

(1825.18) ScottTalism. xvii, "I would buy with every jewel I have, that our fatal jest had remained unacted. (1825)"

(1825.19) ScottBetrothed xx, "`Guarine,' he added, addressing his squire, `let the watch be posted, and do thou remain within the tent.' " (1825)"

(1825.20) ScottBetrothed xix, "Eveline remained silent. The abbess took the word. (1825)"

(1825.21) ScottBetrothed xviii, "Whether he goes to the Crusade or abides at home, the character of Hugh Lacy will remain as unimpeached in point of courage as that of the Archbishop Baldwin in point of sanctitude. (1825)"

(1825.22) WatertonWand. S. Amer. i. i. 88 "The only mode then that remains is to proceed by water. (1825)"

(1825.23) Greenhouse Comp. I. 221 "Where entire plants are layed down to produce layers, they are called stools; and the main root remains there as a stool for several years. (1825)"

(1825.24) Phil. Mag. LXV. 227 "With common salt I obtained the same results, mercury remaining, and *white precipitate being thrown down from the solutions, by liquid ammonia. (1825)"

(1825-9.1) Mrs. SherwoodLady of Manor I. viii. 334 "During the absence of Lord T--, the family-mansion had remained untenanted, the houses of servants and dependents unset. (1825-"

(1826.2) GoodBk. Nat. (1834) I. 166 "The hilum or eye..is a cicatrix or umbilicus remaining after the separation of the umbilical cord from the pericarp. (1826)"

(1826.3) HenryElem. Chem. I. 635 "The remaining salts of alumina have no properties sufficiently important to entitle them to a separate description. (1826)"

(1826.4) HenryElem. Chem. I. 245 "Common or inelastic fluids are capable of remaining in contact with each other for a long time without admixture. (1826)"

(1826.5) HenryElem. Chem. I. 540 "Nitrate of potassa is rapidly decomposed by charcoal at a high temperature..The products of this combustion..are carbonic acid and nitrogen gases. Part of the carbonic acid also remains attached to the residuary alkali, and may be obtained from it on adding a stronger acid. This residue was termed, by the old chemists, clyssus of nitre. (1826)"

(1826.6) Hallam in Edin. Rev. XLIV. 2 "There would be no historical certainty remaining, if it were possible to disbelieve such a contemporary witness as Sir Thomas More. (1826)"

(1826.20) Art of Brewing (ed. 2) 6 "The beer..not suffered to remain in small quantities in the stillions or other utensils. (1826)"

(1826.21) Q. Rev. XXXIV. 75 "This example remained unfollowed by England for almost a century. (1826)"

(1826.22) in Hone Every-day Bk. II. 620 "That their apprentices..were..rendered objects for the remainder of their lives. (1826)"

(1827.1) BarringtonPers. Sk. I. iv. 62 "Nothing..could induce me to remain a walking gentleman: and so, every occupation that I could think of having its peculiar disqualification, I remained [etc.]. (1827)"

(1827.22) U.S. Supreme Court Rep. XXV. 442 "The power to direct the removal of gun-powder is a branch of the *police power which unquestionably remains..with the states. (1827)"

(1828.1) Capt. SmythPres. St. Sardinia 4 "The very singular remains strewed over Sardinia..called Nuraggis... They are strong buildings, in the form of a truncated cone, composed of masses of stone..arranged in layers. (1828)"

(1828.3) CarrCraven Gloss., "`To stick in the stomach,' to remain in the memory with angry resentment. (1828)"

(1828.4) DavySalmonia 30, "I thought after a fish had been hooked, he remained sick and sulky for some time. (1828)"

(1828.5) E. T. ArtisDurobrivae of Antoninus Pl. 48 "Fine red Ware in relief, collected in excavating the remains of a Roman Pottery in the parish of Castor. (1828)"

(1828.6) H. H. Wilson in Asiatic Researches 96 "At noon, he halted and bathed the god, and prepared his food, and presented it, and then took the Pras&aacu.d and put it in a vessel, and fed upon what remained. (1828)"

(1828.7) MoirMansie Wauch ii. 25 "Imagining that nothing remained for them, but to dight their nebs and flee up. (1828)"

(1828.15) Boy's Own Bk. 12 "The moment it [a peg-top] rolls out, he may take it up, and peg at those which still remain inside. (1828)"

(1828.16) Craven Dial. I. 93 "Crockes, two crooked timbers, of a natural bend, forming a Gothic arch. They generally rest in large blocks of stone. Many roofs of this construction are still remaining in ancient farm-houses and barns. (1828)"

(1829.7) J. HaggardRep. Cases Eccl. Courts I. 728 "If the parties lay together in one bed for so many years, of such ages, and the woman is certified to remain virgo intacta, there cannot be a stronger presumption that impotency existed, and that it was incurable. (1829)"

(1829.8) LandorImag. Conv. Wks. 1846 II. 211 "A good writer will not..macerate things into such particles that nothing shall be remaining of their natural contexture. (1829)"

(1829.9) R. StuartAnecd. Steam Eng. I. 149 "Air remained in the cylinder, and prevented..the fall of the piston..: from this cause alone, (and which was afterwards known by the term of *wind-logged) this engine must have soon ceased its motion. (1829)"

(1829.10) ScottAnne of G. xx, "As thou desirest to sleep in an unbloody grave, let me warn thee, that the secrets of this night shall remain with thee. (1829)"

(1829.12) ScottRob Roy xix, "There was a necessity..for arresting the horse, and placing him in Baillie Trumbull's stable, therein to remain at livery, at the rate of twelve shillings (Scotch) per diem. (1829)"

(1830.11) LindleyNat. Syst. Bot. 88 "In Carmich&ae.aeig;lia the valves separate from the suture, which remains entire, like the replum of Crucifer&ae.aeig;. (1830)"

(1830.12) LyellPrinc. Geol. I. 114 "If such species be termed modern, in comparison to races which preceded them, their remains, nevertheless, enter into submarine deposits many hundred miles in length. (1830)"

(1830.13) M. DonovanDom. Econ. I. 137 "What remains, when the decomposition has totally broken down the structure of the vegetable, is a black pulverulent substance... This constitutes what is called vegetable mould, and is also the chief ingredient in vegetable manure. (1830)"

(1830.14) M. DonovanDom. Econ. I. 249 "The *grape-cake which remains after the wine has been pressed out is called by the French les marcs de raisin. (1830)"

(1830.15) M. DonovanDom. Econ. I. 175 "The liquor is pumped..into a large reservoir, called a jack-back, in which it is allowed to remain until all the yest has collected on the surface. (1830)"

(1830.16) MonkBentley xv. 424 "Joanna..was his favourite child:..having received from him the fondling appellation of Jug in her infancy, she continued to be called Jug Bentley, as long as she remained unmarried. (1830)"

(1830.17) MackintoshEth. Philos. Wks. 1846 I. 59 "A permanent foundation of his [Hobbes'] fame remains in his admirable style, which seems to be the very perfection of didactic language. (1830)"

(1830.18) M. DonovanDom. Econ. I. 49 "Her skeleton..remained entire in the chair, which was only a little scorched. (1830)"

(1830.19) Miss MitfordVillage Ser. iv. 332 "The dresser was..adorned with the remains of a long preserved set of tea-china, of a light rambling pattern. (1830)"

(1830.20) M. DonovanDomest. Econ. I. 91 "When malt which has been thus sprinkled remains some time in store, it grows soft, or slack, as it is called. (1830)"

(1830.22) Poisson in Q. Jrnl. Sci., Lit. &amp. Arts VI. 96 "This embarrassment..remained to the period when M. Legendre proposed a direct and uniform method of forming the final equations, which was generally adopted under the name of Method of least squares of the errors, which was assigned to it by its author. (1830)"

(1830.23) ScottDemonol. viii. 266 "The country remained at quiet. (1830)"

(1830.24) TennysonTalk. Oak 204 "A thousand thanks for what I learn And what remains to tell. (1830)"

(1830.25) Edin. Encycl. XVII. 12/1 "The floating iceberg remains to be considered... In many parts of the Antarctic regions, they are met with in vast numbers, and of a prodigious size. (1830)"

(1830.26) Forby's Vocab. E. Anglia, Mem. p. xxxix, "With only one more extract I will close what remains to be said respecting the Icenian Glossary. (1830)"

(1831.2) BenthamLogic App., Wks. 1843 VIII. 286/2 "By *Uranognosy, rather than Astronomy, may that branch of Topography, taken in its largest sense, which remains after the substraction of Geography be designated. (1831)"

(1831.3) BrewsterNewton (1855) II. xvi. 100 "He regarded fossils as the real remains of plants and animals which had been buried in the strata. (1831)"

(1832.3) BabbageEcon. Manuf. xxiii. (ed. 3) 236 "Others remain in the form of melted slags, floating on the surface of the iron. (1832)"

(1832.4) Clift in Trans. Geol. Soc. (1835) III. 437 "The Remains of the Megatherium described in this paper. (1832)"

(1832.5) De la BecheGeol. Man (ed. 2) 193 "The presence of fossils in particular strata was instantly generalized; and it became a well received theory..that every formation..contained the same organic remains, not to be discovered in those above or beneath. (1832)"

(1832.6) De la BecheGeol. Man. (ed. 2) 297 "The remains of mammalia have not yet been detected in the cretaceous group. (1832)"

(1832.7) De la BecheGeol. Man. (ed. 2) 210 "The whole is evidently a detritus of the Alpine rocks, and in it organic remains are by no means common. (1832)"

(1832.8) H. Melvill in Preacher III. 100/2 "If a few portions of the Bible were expurged, it would be hard..to prove the doctrine from the remainder. (1832)"

(1832.9) Ht. MartineauHomes Abr. vii. 104 "He had made a merit of remaining at his work. (1832)"

(1832.10) Ht. MartineauLife in Wilds ix. 121 "There was a general disposition to remain. (1832)"

(1833.11) J. HollandManuf. Metal II. 105 "A *gun-breeching till of late years, was what it still remains in muskets used in the army, simply a plug screwed into the end of the barrel. (1833)"

(1833.12) Jas. DavidsonBrit. &amp. Rom. Rem. Axminster 13 "It has been said that this intrenchment had formerly a double vallum,..but no vestiges of the inner vallum remain, if such an one ever existed. (1833)"

(1833.13) LyellPrinc. Geol. III. 221 "Cuvier also mentions the remains of a species of lophiodon as occurring among the bones in the Upper Val d'Arno. (1833)"

(1833.14) LyellPrinc. Geol. III. 59 "None of the associated mammiferous remains belong to species which now exist. (1833)"

(1833.15) LyellPrinc. Geol. III. 362 "That great masses of subterranean lava in the volcanic foci may remain in a red hot or incandescent state. (1833)"

(1833.16) LyellPrinc. Geol. III. 354 "The strata of sand which immediately repose on the oyster-bed are quite destitute of organic remains. (1833)"

(1833.17) LoudonEncycl. Archit. &sect.1324 "When it [cider] has remained a short time quiet,..if not perfectly star-bright, which it seldom is, it should be fined with isinglass. (1833)"

(1833.20) LambElia, Product. Mod. Art, "Bowed, bent down, so would they have remained, stupor-fixed, with no thought of struggling with that inevitable judgment. (1833)"

(1833.21) LyellPrinc. Geol. III. 4 "By a comparison of the osteology of the existing vertebrated animals with the remains found entombed in ancient strata. (1833)"

(1833.22) MarryatP. Simple xxx, "The body is never allowed to remain many hours unburied in the tropical climates, where putrefaction is so rapid. (1833)"

(1833.23) MarryatP. Simple (1863) 86, "I was sent on board of the guard-ship, where I remained about ten days, and then was sent round to join this frigate. (1833)"

(1833.24) NyrenYng. Cricketer's Tutor 28 "In reaching in too, be especially careful that the right foot remain firmly in its place behind the popping-crease. (1833)"

(1833.25) R. Mushet in Encycl. Brit. (ed. 7) VII. 53/1 "The other piece is ensealed in a packet, and put into a box, called a *pix box,..there to remain until the final trial of the pix by jury before the king. (1833)"

(1833.26) Rees tr. Berzelius' Anal. Inorg. Bodies 135 "When the hydrogen of the acid unites with the sulphur of the base to form sulphureted hydrogen, a metallic *sulphocyanuret remains. (1833)"

(1833.27) R. H. FroudeRem. (1838) I. 286 "In one place there is the remains of an Ionic temple. (1833)"

(1833.28) Sir C. BellHand (1834) 113 "The ichthyosaurus and plesiosaurus..inhabited the sea; their remains are found low in the lias deposit. (1833)"

(1833.29) TennysonLotos Eaters 126 "Let what is broken so remain. The Gods are hard to reconcile. (1833)"

(1833.30) TennysonTwo Voices 82 "Will thirty seasons render plain Those lonely lights that still remain, Just breaking over land and main?" (1833)"

(1834.8) J. S. Mill in Monthly Repos. VIII. 735 "He proposes that those who are convicted of offences..should be no otherwise ill-treated than by being compelled to live as a community apart... If all who, in any manner violated the laws, were removed into such a place of reformation, the inhabitants of the reformatory would speedily outnumber the remainder of the community. (1834)"

(1834.9) J. S. MacaulayField Fortif. 246 "While the repair of the third bay was in progress, the remaining bay was partly unplanked. (1834)"

(1834.18) Chambers's Edin. Jrnl. III. 255/1 "The remainder may be ready for *spring crop with very little labour. (1834)"

(1834.19) Edin. Rev. Oct. 73 "The only difference between Crabbe and himself is the fact, that the one was raised from the ranks, while the other is still remaining in them with at least equal independence. (1834)"

(1834.20) Gentl. Mag. CIV. i. 104 "A rich catafalque was erected in the centre, in which the remains of the Marshal were deposited during the service. (1834)"

(1834.21) Southern Lit. Messenger I. 87 "If he remained longer, he was in danger of tar and feathers. (1834)"

(1835.2) DickensLet. 18 Dec. (1965) I. 109 "It will be unnecessary for me to remain here for the Declaration of the Poll on Monday. (1835)"

(1835.3) DickensSk. Boz, Mr. Watkins Tottle ii, "When he got into Fleet-street, there was `a stoppage,' in which people in vehicles have the satisfaction of remaining stationary for half an hour, [etc.]. (1835)"

(1835.5) J. P. KennedyHorse Shoe R. lii, "[They] preferred to tempt the rigors of the mountain rather than remain in their own dwellings. (1835)"

(1835.6) LindleyIntrod. Bot. (1848) II. 362 "Cancellate, when the parenchyma is wholly absent, and the veins alone remain, anastomosing and forming a kind of net-work. (1835)"

(1835.7) LindleyIntrod. Bot. (1848) II. 362 "Excurrent; in which the axis remains always in the centre, all the other parts being regularly disposed round it; as the stem of abies. (1835)"

(1835.8) LindleyIntrod. Bot. (1848) I. 242 "The withered remains of leaves which not being articulated with the stem cannot fall off but decay upon it have been called..induvi&ae.aeig;, the part so covered is said to be induviate. (1835)"

(1835.9) LindleyIntrod. Bot. (1839) 113 "The withered remains of leaves, which, not being articulated with the stem, cannot fall off, but decay upon it, have been called reliqui&ae.aeig;. (1835)"

(1835.10) LyttonRienzi v. v, "The horse runs from one hand, the halter remains in the other. (1835)"

(1835.12) MarryatJ. Faithful xxiv, "Whether Captain Turnbull or I were right, remains to be proved in the sequel. (1835)"

(1835.13) MarryatOlla Podr. xi. "How the new Poor Law Bill will work remains to be proved. (1835)"

(1835.14) MaldenOrig. Universities 169 "The appointments to the remaining five [professorships] are of a mixed nature, but the town-council has a voice in all. (1835)"

(1835.15) MooreMem. (1856) VII. 82, "[I] set in hard at work at the remainder of my volume. (1835)"

(1835.16) N. P. WillisPencillings II. xxiv. 283 "They remained in dirty white tunics reaching to the floor, and very full at the bottom, so that with the regular motion of their whirl the wind blew them out into a circle, like what the girls in our country call `making cheeses'. (1835)"

(1835.17) R. WillisArchit. Mid. Ages ii. 27 "But the compound archway did not long remain in this simple form, its component archways were early decorated in various ways with shafts and mouldings. (1835)"

(1835.18) UrePhilos. Manuf. 150 "The noyls, or short refuse wool, which remains entangled among the teeth, being removed. (1835)"

(1836.16) W. BucklandGeol. &amp. Mineral. I. ix. 76 "The Tertiary Series introduces a system of new phenomena, presenting formations in which the remains of animal and vegetable life approach gradually nearer to species of our own epoch. (1836)"

(1836.17) WheatonInternat. Law iii. i. &sect.15 "The fiction of extra-territoriality..by which the minister, though actually in a foreign country, is supposed still to remain within the territory of his own sovereign. (1836)"

(1836.18) WheatonElem. Internat. Law I. ii. 63 "The sovereignty of the inferior ally or protected state remains, though limited and qualified by the stipulations of the treaties of alliance and protection. (1836)"

(1836.19) WheatonInternat. Law I. 273 "The fiction of exterritoriality has been invented, by which the minister though actually in a foreign country, is supposed still to remain within the territories of his own sovereign. (1836)"

(1836.20) W. IrvingAstoria lviii. (1849) 477 "The next wave threw their bodies back upon the deck, where they remained swashing backward and forward. (1836)"

(1836.21) WheatonElem. Internat. Law 64 "The city of Cracow in Poland, with its territory, was declared by the congress of Vienna to be a free, independent, and neutral state, under the protection of Russia, Austria, and Prussia... Its sovereignty still remains, except so far as it is affected by the protectorate which may be lawfully asserted over it in pursuance of the treaties of Vienna. (1836)"

(1837.6) C. M. GoodridgeVoy. S. Seas (1843) 126 "After this meal they began a kind of dance, all hands repeating the word corobory. We remained among them till towards daylight, during all which time they continued their revelry. (1837)"

(1837.7) CarlyleFr. Rev. i. iii. viii, "Remains only that the Court..shall make his fall soft. (1837)"

(1837.28) W. IrvingCapt. Bonneville I. viii. 160 "There were the remains of the rude fortress in the swamp, shattered by rifle shot. (1837)"

(1837.29) Blackw. Mag. XLI. 848 "During all the late fury of land-jobbing schemes in the west, of building extravagances in the east, of banco&dubh.mania everywhere,..the cotton manufacture alone remains unscathed. (1837)"

(1837.30) Southern Lit. Messenger III. 656 " They have yet founded no city to themselves..but are willing to remain the boot-cleaners and the *bottle-washers of the whites. (1837)"

(1837-8.1) Sir W. HamiltonLogic I. 257 "The Quantity of the Proposition in Conversion remains always the same; that is, the absolute quantity of the Converse must be exactly equal to that of the Convertend. (1837-"

(1837-8.2) Sir W. HamiltonLogic viii. (1859) I. 134 "The concept horse..cannot, if it remain a concept, that is a universal attribution, be represented in imagination. (1837-"

(1838.2) DickensNich. Nick. xxii, "The whole capital which Nicholas found himself entitled to either in possession, reversion, remainder, or expectancy. (1838)"

(1838.3) F. W. SimmsPubl. Wks. Gt. Brit. i. 62 "About three hundred thousand yards will be taken from this cutting to the embankment north of New Cross, and the remaining quantity will be placed in spoil. The deposit of the spoil and the formation of the embankment are both proceeding rapidly. (1838)"

(1838.4) JamesLouis XIV, I. 247 "That all the arbitrary acts of his predecessor..should remain as unimpugned precedents in case of necessity. (1838)"

(1838.6) Sedgwick in Proc. Geol. Soc. II. 684 "Class 1. Primary stratified Groups... Should organic remains appear unequivocally in any parts of this class, they may be described as the Protozoic System. (1838)"

(1838.7) T. ThomsonChem. Org. Bodies 506 "That portion of the resin which remains undissolved when the turpentine freed from its oil is digested in cold alcohol of 0&rdot.867, has been called silvic acid by Unverdorben, and resin beta by Berzelius. (1838)"

(1838.8) T. ThomsonChem. Org. Bodies 402 "The wine-red substance which remains in solution in the carbonate of ammonia. (1838)"

(1838.9) T. ThomsonChem. Org. Bodies 522 "When the balsam is treated with alcohol, about a fourth part remains undissolved, constituting a white crystalline mass. This is the substance which M. Bonastre has distinguished by the name of styracin. (1838)"

(1838.10) T. ThomsonChem. Org. Bodies 397 "The least period that this impregnation is allowed to remain. (1838)"

(1838.14) W. BellDict. Law Scot., "Thirds... Before the annexation of the year 1587, the King, in order to prevent the entire abstraction of their provisions from the acting clergy,..assumed into his own hands a third of the revenues of all ecclesiastical benefices, which he intrusted to the Commissioners of Plat, who assigned to the ministers respectively sufficient provisions, and reserved the remainder for the King. [See plat [sb. 3] 6.]" (1838)"

(1838.15) Actors by Daylight I. 112/1 "Many of the old supers of course remained. (1838)"

(1838.17) Murray's Hand-bk. N. Germ. 254/1 "A toll is here paid by all vessels navigating the Rhine, to the Duke of Nassau, the only chieftain remaining on the river who still exercises this feudal privilege. (1838)"

(1838.18) Penny Cycl. XII. 460/1 "When common indigo has been treated with dilute acids, alkalis, and alcohol, the remainder is indigo-blue, or indigotin, or indigo nearly in a state of purity. (1838)"

(1838.19) tr. A. Comte in Edin. Rev. July 284 "It remained only [for Comte]..to tack to Hydrodynamics the sciences of Magnetism, Electricity, Galvanism and Thermology. (1838)"

(1839.2) B. H. SmartWay out Metaph. 25 "An intellection having once occurred, remains with us as a notion or something known. (1839)"

(1839.3) C. J. LeverConfessions H. Lorrequer xiii. 99 "During all this mel&eacu.e tournament, I perceived that the worthy jib as he would be called in the parlance of Trinity, Mr. Cudmore, remained perfectly silent. (1839)"

(1839.4) De la BecheRep. Geol. Cornwall, etc. xv. 569 "Of the remainder he paid the adventurers one-half, or one-quarter, as may have been agreed upon according to the supposed prospects of the mine at the time of setting. (1839)"

(1839.5) DickensNich. Nick. ii, "The clerk calmly remained in a stationary position. (1839)"

(1839.6) De QuinceyCasuistry Wks. VIII. 308 "If the law of extradition should remain unchanged. (1839)"

(1839.7) DonaldsonNew Cratylus &sect.70 (1850) 107 "Their apparent [Semitic] trigrammatism, their etymological disintegration, and the tertiary condition in which their oldest remains are found, must be referred to the constant intermixtures, re-unions [etc.]. (1839)"

(1839.10) E. J. Woolsey in Ure Dict. Arts (1839) 782 "When you wish to see the quantity of oil remaining in the lubricator. (1839)"

(1839.11) G. RobertsDict. Geol., "Tripoli powder.., used for polishing fossils, &amp.c. It is itself the remains of fossil insects. (1839)"

(1839.12) H. RogersEss. II. iii. 140 "While the trunk of the language remains the same, the twigs and frailer branches are torn away by the storm. (1839)"

(1839.13) KeightleyHist. Eng. II. 35 "Her character remains the object of respect to all parties. (1839)"

(1839.14) MarryatPhant. Ship x, "Philip remained on deck by the *poop-ladder. (1839)"

(1839.15) MurchisonSilur. Syst. i. xxxv. 474 "The organic remains are of great interest in establishing the geological identity between the coal measures of the Dudley district and those of distant parts of Great Britain. (1839)"

(1839.16) MaynardGoodacre's Arith. (ed. 9) 37 "When..the remainder is more than the divisor, the quotient figure was too small, the work must be rubbed out, and a larger number supplied. (1839)"

(1839.17) R. S. RobinsonNaut. Steam Eng. 101 "To shut the steam port before the eduction port, leaving the expansive power of the steam, already in the cylinder, to finish the remainder of the stroke. (1839)"

(1839.18) RuskinPoetry Arch. vi. &sect.87 "A man who could remain a radical in a wood country is a disgrace to his species. (1839)"

(1839.31) UreDict. Arts 998 "Were it to remain a very little longer, the silver would become alloyed with the copper, and the plating be thus completely spoiled. (1839)"

(1839.32) UreDict. Arts 627 "The nitre contains five primes of oxygen, of which three, combining with the three of charcoal, will furnish three of carbonic oxide gas, while the remaining two will convert the one prime of sulphur into sulphurous acid gas. The single prime of nitrogen is, there&dubh.fore, in this view, disengaged alone. (1839)"

(1839.33) YeowellAnc. Brit. Ch. ix. (1847) 93 "The remains of the Druidical order were not persecuted. (1839)"

(1839.34) Dundee Advertiser 12 Apr., "As he remained obstreperous, the policeman put on the shangies. (1839)"

(1839.35) New Monthly Mag. LVI. 61 "Wimbling deeper and deeper still, till he has shattered the remains of your nerves to atoms. (1839)"

(1839.36) Penny Cycl. XV. 448/1 "Mother&dubh.water. When any saline solution has been evaporated so as to deposit crystals on cooling, the remaining solution is termed the mother-water, or sometimes merely the mothers. (1839)"

(1839.37) Penny Cycl. XIV. 53 "The bulk of the Lithuanian nation remained faithful to their idols. (1839)"

(1839.38) Penny Cycl. XIV. 58 "Lituus, a name given to a spiral thus described:-Let a variable circular sector always have its centre at one fixed point, and one of its terminal radii in a given direction. Let the area of the sector always remain the same; then the extremity of the other terminal radius describes the lituus. The polar equation of this spiral is r2&theta. = a. (1839)"

(1839.39) Penny Cycl. XIII. 383/2 "Leeches are oviparous. The ova remain in the uterus for some time. (1839)"

(1839.40) Visitor 479/1 "Living objects, if they remain motionless during the short periods of exposure, are given with perfect fidelity. (1839)"

(1839-40.1) W. IrvingWolfert's R. 316 "The fate of these saints-errant had hitherto remained a mystery. (1839-"

(1840.15) LardnerGeom. 108 "If from the square of the side opposite the right angle, the square of the given side be substracted, the remainder will be the square of the third side. (1840)"

(1840.16) MacaulayEss., Ranke &page.51 "Even the honours of sepulture were long withheld from his remains. (1840)"

(1840.17) R. H. DanaBef. Mast iii, "The larboard watch..go below until four in the morning, when they come on deck again and remain till eight, having what is called the morning watch. (1840)"

(1840.18) R. H. DanaBef. Mast vii, "We were then divided into three watches, and thus stood out the remainder of the night. (1840)"

(1840.19) Sir W. HamiltonLogic App. (1860) II. 276 "According to the doctrine of the logicians, conversion applies only to the naked terms themselves:-the subject and predicate of the prejacent interchange places, but the quantity by which each was therein affected is excluded from the movement; remaining to affect its correlative in the subjacent proposition. (1840)"

(1840.20) ThackerayShabby-genteel Story v, "He was allowed to remain in the house, an undeclared but very assiduous lover. (1840)"

(1840.22) WhyteHist. Turf I. 200 "The shareholders will receive five per cent...the remainder to go to the *race fund. (1840)"

(1840.23) Civil Engin. &amp. Arch. Jrnl. III. 68/2 "In the Newcastle pits..blocks or `stooks' of considerable strength are suffered to remain, for the purpose of protecting the colliers from the exfoliation of the roof. (1840)"

(1840.25) Gentl. Mag. Oct. 338 "Both places..bear the name of Mock-Beggar's Hall. The one is an insulated rock near Bakewell..presenting from the road the semblance of a house... The other is a Tudor..mansion in the parish of Claydon..which..remained so long unoccupied as to be the cause of numerous disappointments to those travellers who had never been taken in before. (1840)"

(1840.26) Penny Cycl. XVI. 491/2 "Thus employed, `organic remains' become a clue to many of the darkest pages in the antient history of our planet. (1840)"

(1840.27) Penny Cycl. XVI. 151/2 "When the spinal chord remains, its passage may be indicated by the phenomena of reflex motion. (1840)"

(1841.4) C. E. LesterGlory Eng. II. 139 "When one of the six..happens to die, the remaining five fill up the void; and thus the priesthood, or, rather, priestesshood, lives on in a sort of corporate immortality. (1841)"

(1841.6) ElphinstoneHist. Ind. xii. iii. II. 633 "The inhabitants of Delhi remained in a sort of stupor. They had not yet recovered the terror of the past. (1841)"

(1841.7) ElphinstoneHist. Ind. II. 581 "It only remained to the brothers to decide on the fate of its tenant. (1841)"

(1841.8) H. J. StephenComm. Laws Eng. i. vii. I. 307 "When land is settled..by a limitation to the parent for life, and after his death to his first and other sons in tail, and trustees are interposed to preserve the contingent remainders, this is called a strict settlement. (1841)"

(1841.9) J. F. BurkeOn Land-Drainage 4 "Remains have been found of some very ancient land-drains. (1841)"

(1841.10) Keble in Hooker's Wks. (1888) I. p. cxv, "It is hoped that this republication of his remains..will cause them to become more generally read. (1841)"

(1841.11) Ld. CockburnCircuit Journ. (1888) 120 "Its stalactites were unbroken... Now that not one remains, the whole charm, which was in its sparriness, is gone. (1841)"

(1841.20) TottenNaval Text Bk. 394 "Skin, that part of a sail, when furled, which remains outside and covers the whole. (1841)"

(1841.21) W. SpaldingItaly &amp. It. Isl. III. 393 "The government was to undertake a certain part of the speculation, while the remainder of the capital might be given off in shares. (1841)"

(1841.22) W. DeansLet. 25 Mar. in J. Deans Pioneers of Canterbury (1937) 33 "Mr. Molesworth let a town acre of his for &pstlg.240..for 14 years, buildings and improvements to remain at the end of the lease. (1841)"

(1842.3) BrandeDict. Sci. etc., "Paracrostic, a poetical composition in which the first verse contains, in order, all the letters which commence the remaining verses of the poem or division. According to Cicero (De Divinatione, ii. 54), the original Sibylline verses were paracrostics. (1842)"

(1842.4) BrandeDict. Sci. etc. s.v. Lampyrin&ae.aeig;, "The females of some of the Lampyrine tribe are apterous..and are luminous. All the Lampyrines, when seized, press their feet and antenn&ae.aeig; against their body, and remain as motionless as if they were dead. (1842)"

(1842.5) BrandeDict. Sc., etc., s.v., "Hevelius chose the name of polemoscope, because he thought the instrument might be applied, in time of war, to discover what was going on in the camp of the enemy, while the spectator remained concealed behind a wall or other defence. (1842)"

(1842.10) J. AitonDom. Econ. (1857) 123 "Make it something `wiselike' and substantial, that it may remain as a monument of your own liberality and good sense. (1842)"

(1842.11) J. AitonDomest. Econ. (1857) 221 "A corn sickle is then drawn through the butter several cross ways, in order to take out any hairs that may remain in it; and if any other motes appear, they are also taken out. (1842)"

(1842.13) J. AitonDomest. Econ. (1857) 194 "As some of the shells still remain among the meal, they are separated from it by hand-sieves; these shells, thus separated, and having the finer particles of meal adhering to them, called *mill-seeds, are preserved for sowins. (1842)"

(1842.14) JamesMorley Ernstein xv, "With that careful *eschewance of all listening ears..that gentleman remained bowing in silence till the waiter was out of the room. (1842)"

(1842.15) ManningSerm. xxv. (1848) 382 "There still remains with us a fast-cleaving and mysterious evil. (1842)"

(1842.16) Mrs. KirklandForest Life II. 19 "The short remainder of his stay at Mr. Hay's, say him eat his meals like a Trappist. (1842)"

(1842.17) PrichardNat. Hist. Man 189 "The remains of the dead found entombed in various parts of Europe. (1842)"

(1842.18) ParnellChem. Anal. (1845) 96 "Silver and palladium are the only noble metals which dissolve in melted bisulphate of potash. Note. Noble metals are those which do not become converted into oxides, but remain bright when heated in the air. (1842)"

(1842.19) TennysonDay-Dream 74 "Here all things in their place remain, As all were order'd, ages since. (1842)"

(1842.20) ThackeraySultan Stork Wks. 1898 IV. 738 "Nor of the latter did there remain any unkilled (if I may coin such a word). (1842)"

(1842.23) W. F. TolmieJrnl. 7 May (1963) 359 "As the great display of waterworks was to take place at 5, I finally decided on remaining. (1842)"

(1842.24) Jrnl. R. Agric. Soc. III. i. 37, "I offered a conjecture, that those larv&ae.aeig; which entered the ground had been `ichneumonized', whilst those which remained encased and in the ears would be found uninjured. (1842)"

(1842.25) Penny Cycl. XXII. 119/2 "This measure..was followed by the abolition of the two remaining Socinian schools. (1842)"

(1842.26) Penny Cycl. XXII. 104/2 "The use of the Cyrillic letters..remained in full vigour among those [Slavonians] who belonged to the Eastern Church. (1842)"

(1843.1) ArnoldHist. Rome III. 284 "Two solitary pillars still remain, and serve as a seamark to guide ships into the great harbour. (1843)"

(1843.3) Foster in Life &amp. Corr. (1846) II. 458, "I remained in a kind of baffle between that perfectly preserved image, and his actual appearance. (1843)"

(1843.4) HammondDef. Faith &Oe.cum. Councils 31 "The third order of penitents, called..kneelers or prostrators, because they were allowed to remain and join in certain prayers particularly made for them, whilst they were kneeling, or prostrate on the ground. (1843)"

(1843.5) J. C. ShairpLet. 25 Sept. in W. A. Knight Principal Shairp (1888) vi. 71 "This..makes good my summer's work. `The Slows' are my bane, but I must be courageous and face what remains... If I could but secure a second, I should be happy. (1843)"

(1843.6) J. H. GreeneExpos. Arts Gambling 166 "Hockley, signifies the last card but one, the chance of which the banker claims, and may refuse to let any punter withdraw a card when eight or less remain to be dealt. (1843)"

(1843.7) KemblePoetry Codex Vercell. Pref. 6 "A series of publications which..will give to the world of scholars every yet inedited remain of Anglosaxon. (1843)"

(1843.8) MillLogic iii. xiv. &sect.4 "It appears..to be a condition of a genuinely scientific hypothesis, that it be not destined always to remain an hypothesis, but be of such a nature as to be either proved or disproved by that comparison with observed facts which is termed Verification. (1843)"

(1843.9) PuseySerm. Holy Euch. 10 "The remains of original corruption and our own superadded sins. (1843)"

(1843.10) PrescottMexico vii ii. (1850) III. 215 "Vera Cruz..has remained ever since the great commercial capital of New Spain. (1843)"

(1843.11) PrescottMexico (1850) I. 221 "The vessel..in which Cortes himself went, was of a hundred tons' burden..the remainder were caravels and open brigantines. (1843)"

(1843.12) R. J. GravesSyst. Clin. Med. v. 71 "The patient was in such a profound sopor, that apparently nothing but warmth remained to indicate that life had not already become extinct. (1843)"

(1844.2) B. DisraeliConingsby II. iv. vii. 77 "Under ordinary circumstances a French bed and a brasier of charcoal alone remained for Villebecque, who was equal to the occasion. (1844)"

(1844.3) DickensMart. Chuz. xvi, "A few sedentary characters..remained at table full a quarter of an hour. (1844)"

(1844.4) DickensMart. Chuz. li. 592 "The other [man], seating himself on the steps of the coach, remained in conversation with Slyme... `He's booked,' observed the man. `Through,' said Slyme. (1844)"

(1844.5) EmersonLect. New Eng. Ref. Wks. (Bohn) I. 263 "It is handsomer to remain in the establishment,..and conduct that in the best manner, than to make a sally against evil by some single improvement. (1844)"

(1844.12) Little in Jrnl. R. Agric. Soc. Eng. V. i. 178 "Most of these commons are now enclosed;..some still remain in pasture, and the common field husbandry, or `tenantry', as it is called, is abolished. (1844)"

(1844.17) P. HarwoodHist. Irish Rebell. 41 note, "The other boroughs, which were close or snug, sent the remainder. (1844)"

(1844.18) StephensBk. Farm I. 372 "An iron tramp-pick to loosen the subsoil immediately under the mould, and raise the boulder stones... The tramp..is movable, and may be placed on either side to suit the foot of the workman, where it remains firm at about 16 inches from the point, which gradually tapers. (1844)"

(1844.19) StanleyArnold I. iv. 187 "He remained eminently practical to the end of his life. (1844)"

(1845.15) KnightOld Eng. i. i. 18/2 "Such are the remains which have been called Tolmen; a Tolman being explained to be an immense mass of rock placed aloft on two subjacent rocks which admit of a free passage between them. (1845)"

(1845.16) M. PattisonEss. (1889) I. 28 "A prison..the ruins of which long after, remained on the left bank of the Seine. (1845)"

(1845.17) Mrs. S. C. HallWhiteboy vi, "The rouged, and ornamented, and perfumed remains dressed for the funeral as if for a feast! " (1845)"

(1845.18) M. PattisonEss. (1889) I. 28 "A prison..the ruins of which long after remained on the left bank of the Seine. (1845)"

(1845.19) NewmanEss. Developm. 43 "The Conference Connexion remains the representative of the Wesleyan ideas; in its gradual independence and growing substantiveness [etc.]. (1845)"

(1845.22) Ecclesiologist IV. 282 "The *cradle roof of the chancel still remains; some of the bosses are very good. (1845)"

(1845.23) Williams's Directory of Leeds 46 (Advt.), "One-third of the `*Whole Life' Premium may remain unpaid..as a Debt upon the Policy. (1845)"

(1846.1) McCullochAcc. Brit. Empire (1854) I. 65 "Wealden series, a name given to a series of clays, sands, and limestones, from being well developed in the weald of Sussex, and which is remarkable for containing the remains of terrestrial, freshwater, and &ae.aeig;stuary animals. (1846)"

(1846.2) A. YoungNaut. Dict. 289 "Spaling, or Baulking, in shipbuilding, means keeping the frames to their proper breadths by cross-spales or baulks, which should so remain till some of the deck beam knees are bolted. (1846)"

(1846.3) Brittan tr. Malgaigne's Man. Oper. Surg. 521 "It only remains to incise the prostate and neck of the bladder in withdrawing the lithotome. (1846)"

(1846.4) Clarke in Jrnl. R. Agric. Soc. VII. ii. 511 "To rafter or plough-rafter the land..is to plough only one-half of the land, turning the furrow ploughed upon the same breadth of land remaining unploughed throughout the field. (1846)"

(1846.8) GroteGreece II. ii. vii. 572 "The scanty fragments remaining to us of his elegies and anap&ae.aeig;sts. (1846)"

(1846.9) GroteGreece i. iv. (1862) I. 76 "The remaining daughters..were given in marriage to the victors in a gymnic contest. (1846)"

(1846.10) GreenerSc. Gunnery 12 "It remained thus until the trigger of the cross-bow suggested a contrivance to convey, with equal certainty and greater rapidity, the burning match to the pan. (1846)"

(1846.11) J. BaxterLibr. Pract. Agric. (ed. 4) I. 265 "They should never be allowed to remain more than two years in the seed-bed, for in that case they will be completely spoiled. (1846)"

(1846.12) J. BaxterLibr. Pract. Agric. (ed. 4) II. 353 "The smaller bone-dust is ground the more effective it is as a manure..on the other hand large or drilled or *inch-bones, as they are called, remain longer in the soil undecomposed, but produce less immediate effect. On these accounts bone-dust is the more valuable manure for turnips, and inch-bones for wheat. (1846)"

(1846.16) Von MohlSaftbewegungen im Inneren der Zellen in Botan. Zeitung 73 tr. Henfrey (1852) 37 "The remainder of the cell is more or less densely filled with an opake, viscid fluid, of a white colour, having granules intermingled in it, which fluid I call protoplasm. (1846)"

(1846.17) W. Hamilton in Reid's Wks. 852/1 "Repulsion..remains, as apparently an actio in distans,..inconceivable as a possibility [for inclusion among the primary qualities of body]. (1846)"

(1846.18) De Bow's Commerc. Rev. II. 324 "Fortunately the [sugar] cane is not an annual plant. Each year fresh shoots spring from the stubble which remains after cutting the crop. (1846)"

(1846.19) SylvanusPedestrian &amp. other Reminiscences xxiv. 221 "The laying on a `double event', when one of them remains in the bettor's power, having his victim bound in the..chain of certain..loss. (1846)"

(1847.1) AnstedAnc. World iv. 62 "The remaining two groups [of Fishes] are called respectively Ctenoid..and Cycloid..from the shape and structure of the scale. (1847)"

(1847.2) Craig, "Detruncation, The separation of the trunk of the f&oe.tus from the head, the latter remaining in utero. (1847)"

(1847.3) CarpenterZool. &sect.514 "In the Proteid&ae.aeig;, or perenni-branchiate Batrachia, the gills remain during the whole of life. (1847)"

(1847.4) DisraeliTancred iv. iv, "The twilight descended over the rocky city,..and its strewn remains of palaces and theatres. (1847)"

(1847.21) Pal&ae.aeig;ontographical Society, Laws, 1. "That the Society formed be called the Pal&ae.aeig;ontographical Society, and that it shall have for its objects the illustration and description of British fossil organic remains. (1847)"

(1848.2) BartlettDict. Amer. s.v. Put, "To stay put, to remain in order; not to be disturbed. A vulgar expression. (1848)"

(1848.3) BartlettDict. Amer. (1859) 368 "River-Driver, a term applied by lumbermen in Maine, to a man whose business it is to conduct logs down running streams, to prevent them from lodging upon shoals or remaining in eddies. (1848)"

(1848.21) W. H. BartlettEgypt to Pal. xxiv. (1879) 480 "The satisfaction of the traveller at Nazareth comes from the presence of those natural objects and scenes which alone remain unchanged. (1848)"

(1848.22) W. BartlettEgypt to Pal. x. (1879) 221 "The remaining part of the elevation seemed like a small hill placed upon a terrace. (1848)"

(1848.23) W. H. BartlettEgypt to Pal. xvi. (1879) 335 "Already we had fallen into the region of ancient remains. (1848)"

(1848.24) WhartonLaw Lex., "Executed Contract, is where nothing remains to be done by either party. (1848)"

(1848.25) Art Union Jrnl. Feb. 49 "It is placed in a galvano&dubh.plastic apparatus, in which it remains till it is galvano&dubh.plastically covered. (1848)"

(1848.26) Jrnl. Brit. Archaeol. Assoc. Apr. 2 "The Samian ware is found throughout this country almost wherever Roman remains are met with. (1848)"

(1848.27) Jrnl. R. Agric. Soc. IX. ii. 555 "It is not..necessary for the hop-tiers to wait until there are three bines for every pole long enough to tie, that is, for the hills to furnish, as they term it..When every pole furnished with three bines pull the remainder out of the hills. (1848)"

(1848.29) in `F. Forester' Field Sports II. 326 "The gobblers continued yelping in answer to the female, which all this time remained on the fence. (1848)"

(1848.30) tr. Hoffmeister's Trav. Ceylon, etc. vii. 244 "We remained for several days, on account of a tiger&dubh.hunt. (1848)"

(1849.1) A. De Morgan in Trans. Cambridge Philos. Soc. VIII. 380 "By not dwelling upon this power of making what we may properly (inventing a new technical name) call the universe of a proposition, or of a name, matter of express definition, all rules remaining the same, writers on logic deprive themselves of much useful illustrations. (1849)"

(1849.2) BalfourMan. Bot. &sect.578 "Sometimes the secundine remains distinct in the seed, forming what has been called a mesosperm. (1849)"

(1849.3) BalfourMan. Bot. &sect.647 "In Trop&ae.aeig;olum pentaphyllum..there are three petals suppressed, as shown by the position of the two remaining ones; there are two rows of stamens, in each of which one is awanting, and there are two carpels suppressed. (1849)"

(1849.4) D. CampbellInorg. Chem. 221 "When the protochloride of uranium is carefully heated, so as not to volatilize it,..this compound remains. (1849)"

(1849.5) D. CampbellInorg. Chem. 49 "Sometimes there is a very small quantity of undecomposed matter remaining undissolved. (1849)"

(1849.6) D. J. BrowneAmer. Poultry Yard (1855) 89 "The ends of the nest box may be shifted, so that she will be in the sitting room, where she may remain..till she hatches her brood. (1849)"

(1849.15) L. HuntBk. for Corner I. 14 "There are Robinson Crusoes in the moral as well as physical world..;-men, cast on desert islands of thought and speculation; without companionship; without worldly resources; forced to arm and clothe themselves out of the remains of shipwrecked hopes, and to make a home for their solitary hearts in the nooks and corners of imagination and reading. (1849)"

(1849.33) PoeE. B. Browning Wks. 1865 III. 404 "The reader will suffer the most valuable ore to remain unmined to all eternity, before [etc.]. (1849)"

(1849.34) RockCh. of Fathers II. 138 note, "The mosaiced apse belonging to one of those large halls built in the Lateran palace, at Rome, by Leo III..still remains. (1849)"

(1849.35) Hahnemann's Organon Introd. 28 "However..he may affect to be a hom&oe.opathist, [he] is and will always remain a generalizing all&oe.opathist. (1849)"

(1849.36) Jrnl. R. Agric. Soc. X. i. 178 "The gleans [of hemp] are lifted on to the ground, and form a couch..If suffered to remain longer in the couch it heats and rots. (1849)"

(1849.37) Weale's Dict. Terms, "Scraper, a piece of iron used to take out the pulverized matter which remains in a hole when bored previous to blasting. (1849)"

(1849-52.1) Todd's Cycl. Anat. IV. 857/1 "There remains a large class of pure sapors, of which we take cognizance without the assistance of smell, and which are altogether dissimilar to any tactile impressions: such as the bitter of quinine. (1849-"

(1850.1) GroteGreece lxvi. VI. 17 "Lysias..passed the remainder of his life as an Isoteles, or non-freeman on the best condition. (1850)"

(1850.14) Lyell2nd Visit U.S. II. 197 "The fossil remains of the mammoth (a name commonly applied in the United States to the mastodon). (1850)"

(1850.15) LeitchM&uuml.ller's Anc. Art &sect.345. 412 "The isolated statue was historically developed from the pillar; the Herma remained as an intermediate step, inasmuch as it placed a human head on a pillar having the proportions of the human form. (1850)"

(1850.26) Bohn's Hand-bk. Games 337 "Hockly, a Certainty, signifies the last card but one, the chance of which the banker claims, and may refuse to let any punter withdraw a card when eight or less remain to be dealt. (1850)"

(1850.27) Bohn's Handbk. Games 327 (Lottery), "One of them [dealers] deals a card to each player; all these cards are to remain turned, and are called the lots. (1850)"

(1850.29) Jrnl. R. Agric. Soc. XI. ii. 430 "The crop being well grown, it only remains to feed it well off. (1850)"

(1850.30) Rudim. Navig. (Weale) 128 "Laps, the remaining part of the ends of carlings, &amp.c. which are to bear a great weight or pressure, such as the capstan-step. (1850)"

(1851.1) CarlyleSterling ii. vi. (1872) 138 "We need not dwell at too much length on the foreign journeys, disanchorings, and nomadic vicissitudes of household, which occupy his few remaining years. (1851)"

(1851.7) H. MelvilleWhale xxxiii. 161 "That certain sultanism of his brain, which had otherwise in a good degree remained unmanifested. (1851)"

(1851.8) Mayne ReidScalp Hunt. xxvi, "Those who remain cut the [buffalo] meat into long thin strips, and hang it over the lines already prepared for this purpose. It is thus left to be baked by the sun into `tasajo'. (1851)"

(1851.9) MayhewLond. Labour 34/1 "The back and the remainder of the front having been used for refooting boots. (1851)"

(1851.10) Mrs. BrowningCasa Guidi Wind. ii. 117 "The people rose up in the dust.., and shouted..`Live the People,' who remained and must, The unrenounced and unrenounceable. (1851)"

(1851.15) Sylvester in Philos. Mag. Nov., "The remaining coefficients are the two well-known hyperdeterminants, or, as I propose henceforth to call them, the two Invariants of the form ax4 + 4bx3y + 6cx2y2 + 4dxy3 + ey4. (1851)"

(1851.16) TurnerDom. Archit. I. vi. 305 "There are still some remains of good distemper diaper on the walls. (1851)"

(1851.17) WolffPict. Spanish Life vi. 176 "Remaining a `square party',..we all four embarked in the little boat. (1851)"

(1851.18) WoodwardMollusca 11 "The sedentary tribes settle in the place they intend to occupy during the remainder of their lives. (1851)"

(1851.19) 2nd Rep. Relief of Destit. Highlands 1850, 42 "The crofting system was first introduced, by the arable part of the small farms previously held in common being divided among the joint tenants in separate crofts, the pasture remaining in common. (1851)"

(1851.20) Dict. Archit., "*Hart's Black, that substance remaining..after the spirits, volatile salt and oil, have been extracted from hartshorn..when..levigated it answers the purpose of painters nearly as well as ivory black. (1851)"

(1851.22) Illustr. Catal. Gt. Exhib. 278 "The long fibres called line, which remains in the hand of the heckler. (1851)"

(1851.23) Illustr. Catal. Gt. Exhib. 162 "In the reign of King John, the mines [were] principally in the hands of the Jews..remains of furnaces, called *Jews' houses, have been discovered, and small blocks of tin, known as Jews' tin, have..been found in the mining localities. (1851)"

(1851.25) London as it is To-day i. (1855) 9 "At [the] extremity [of Fleet St.], separating the cities of London and Westminster, stands Temple Bar, the only one of the city boundaries now remaining. (1851)"

(1852.1) B. PriceInfinites. Calc. I. xiii. 409 "If an equation to a curve be given, involving one or more constants, as well as the current coordinates, the position and dimensions of the curve will be changed by a change in the constants, and yet the class may remain the same... A constant that enters into an equation, and varies in the way above explained, is called a variable parameter. (1852)"

(1852.2) BristedFive Yrs. Eng. Univ. (ed. 2) 253 "Of the remainder, five were Wranglers, four of these Double men, and a fifth a favorite for the Wedge... The last man is called the Wedge, corresponding to the Spoon in Mathematics. (1852)"

(1852.3) CloughPoems, etc. (1869) I. 348 "In the prostration to ancient tenets and habits the old character remains upright, unoverthrown and unsubdued. (1852)"

(1852.4) EarpGold Col. 98 "The remaining mode of occupying land in New South Wales is to `squat', i.e. to lease a large tract from the Government for purposes purely pastoral. (1852)"

(1852.12) ThackerayEsmond xi, "So my Lord Castlewood remained a nonjuror all his life nearly. (1852)"

(1852.13) W. GregoryHandbk. Org. Chem. 417 "Tekoretine, Phylloretine, *Xyloretine, and Boloretine, are the names of four resinous compounds, found in the peat of Denmark, on the remains of pine-trees. (1852)"

(1853.10) LyellPrinc. Geol. vi. (ed. 9) 80 "The carcass of a rhinoceros..taken from the sand in which it must have remained congealed for ages. (1853)"

(1853.11) LyttonMy Novel x. xiii, "How far his reasonings and patience served to his ends, remains yet to be seen. (1853)"

(1853.12) L. Pasteur in Chem. Gaz. 1 Sept. 323 "The latter [body]..resists isomeric transformation, and remaining without alteration in the quinicine, gives this its feeble deviation to the right. The other group, which..is very active, becomes inactive when the quinine is heated so as to become converted into quinicine; so that quinicine is nothing but quinine in which one of the active constituent groups has become inactive. (1853)"

(1853.13) Mrs. GaskellCranford iii. 51 "The state of the remainder wine was examined into in a *family council. (1853)"

(1853.14) Mrs. GaskellRuth III. viii. 230 "Leonard's remaining such a home-bird..with such a mother..will do him no harm. (1853)"

(1853.15) Mrs. GaskellCranford xv. 228 "Miss Matty would be perplexed as to her duty if she were aware of any little reserve-fund being made for her while the debts of the bank remained unpaid. (1853)"

(1853.16) PhillipsRivers of Yorksh. iii. 104 "The only remaining affluent of importance on its northern banks, viz. the river Hull. (1853)"

(1853.17) RuskinStones Ven. II. iii. &sect.10 "The irritated pride of the antagonists remained unsoothed by the love-feast of St. Stephen's day. (1853)"

(1853.22) Sir W. Thomson in Philos. Mag. Ser. iv. V. 288 note, "The potential at any point in the neighbourhood of or within a charged body is the quantity of work that would be required to bring a unit of positive electricity from an infinite distance to that point if the given distribution of electricity remained unaltered. (1853)"

(1853.23) StocquelerMilit. Encycl. 215 "Inlying Piquets, detachments told off to remain in camp, but fully accoutred, and ready to turn out instantly on alarm. (1853)"

(1853.24) StocquelerMil. Dict. s.v., "In another sense, the `honours of war' signifyeth compliments which are paid to great personages, military characters, etc., when they appear before any armed body of men; or such as are given to the remains of a deceased officer.-Military Honours, are salutations to crowned heads and officers of rank, by dropping colours and standards, officers saluting, bands playing, artillery discharging salvoes, etc. (1853)"

(1853.25) SoyerPantroph. 380 "Another custom..was that of warming the remains of a preceding banquet for other guests. (1853)"

(1853.27) UreDict. Arts I. 98 "When the lead is wasted to a certain degree, a very thin film of it only remains on the silver, which causes the iridescent appearance, like the colours of soap-bubbles; a phenomenon, called by the old chemists, fulguration. (1853)"

(1853.28) Q. Jrnl. Geol. Soc. IX. 25 "The `Gedinnian system' must be entirely separated from the Rhenane series with which..it has no organic remains in common. (1853)"

(1853.29) Q. Jrnl. Geol. Soc., 25 "The `Gedinnian system' must be entirely separated from the Rhenane series, with which..it has no organic remains in common. (1853)"

(1854.2) D. G. RossettiLet. c 26 June (1965) I. 203 "The rest he put into a sale at Christie's, after taking my advice as to the reserve he ought to put on the Hunt, which I fixed at 500 gs. It reached 300 in real biddings, after which Mac's touters ran it up to 430, trying to revive it, but of course it remains with him. (1854)"

(1854.3) E. ForbesOpening Disc. in Nat. H. Chair in Wilson &amp. Geikie Life xv. (1861) 554 "None who remained constant to the beautiful studies of his *pupilhood. (1854)"

(1854.4) H. MillerSch. &amp. Schm. i. (1857) 9 "For a man who had often looked death in the face, he had remained nicely tender of human life. (1854)"

(1854.13) PereiraPolarized Light 132 "On rotating the film (the analyzer and polarizer remaining still), a brilliant colour is perceived at every quadrant of a circle, but in intermediate positions it vanishes altogether..so that when the film alone is revolved one colour only is seen, but when the analyzer alone is revolved, two colours are seen. (1854)"

(1854.15) Ronalds &amp. RichardsonChem. Technol. (ed. 2) I. 107 "The oxide of iron which remains in the coke forms with the siliciate a slag or scar when the carbon is consumed. (1854)"

(1854.16) Ronalds &amp. RichardsonChem. Technol. (ed. 2) I. 292 "The short pipes v are consequently allowed to project about that much above the level of the plate, while their lower extremities dip into shallow cups which remain filled with liquid. (1854)"

(1854.18) T. Aufrecht in C. Bunsen Christianity &amp. Mankind III. 93 "The vowels have..been well preserved... The final consonants in the flexions have remained. The vocalism and consonantism stand in good organic relation to each other. (1854)"

(1854.19) T. T. LynchLett. to Scattered etc. (1872) 383 "The stoniness of his own heart may remain. (1854)"

(1854.20) ThackerayNewcomes I. 90 "There was never a card in her window, whilst those ensigns in her neighbours' houses would remain exposed..for months together. (1854)"

(1854.21) TomlinsonArago's Astron. 17 "They had remarked that, amidst the general movement of the sphere, one of the stars of the Lesser Bear appeared always to remain in the same position. (1854)"

(1854.22) WoodwardMollusca 286 "Specimens frequently occur in which the outer shell layer is preserved, whilst the inner is wanting, and the mould (`birostrites') remains loose in the centre. (1854)"

(1855.1) BrewsterNewton I. iii. 42 "Subducting the diameter of the hole from the length and breadth of the image, there remains 13 inches in the length and 238 inches in the breadth. (1855)"

(1855.2) BrowningLove among Ruins iv, "The single little turret that remains On the plains, By the caper overrooted, by the gourd Overscored. (1855)"

(1855.3) DickensDorrit ii. vii, "The rugged remains of temples and tombs and palaces and senate halls and theatres. (1855)"

(1855.4) E. WaughLanc. Life (1857) 33 "The last sylvan stronghold of the fairies; where they would remain impregnable, haunting wild `thrutches' and sylvan `chapels', in lonely deeps of its cloughs and woods. (1855)"

(1855.5) E. ForbesLit. Papers vii. 190 "He remains too long in the thick and stuffy atmosphere of town clubs and libraries. (1855)"

(1855.6) HardwichMan. Photogr. Chem. 173 "It is always necessary to print the picture some shades darker than it is intended to remain. (1855)"

(1855.7) J. HewittAnc. Armour I. 78 "The shields placed in the graves were the ordinary `lindens', of which no part commonly remains but the metal-boss and handle. (1855)"

(1855.8) KingsleyGlaucus 140 "Its remaining fresh argued that the coralline had reoxygenated it from time to time. (1855)"

(1855.9) LiddellHist. Rome I. i. iii. 56 "A person who once belonged either to a Romulian Tribe of birth or a Servian Tribe of place, always remained a member of that Tribe. (1855)"

(1855.10) Lorenz tr. Van der Keessel's Select Theses dccclxxiv, "How can the hypothecary action against the same debtor remain for a period of forty years? " (1855)"

(1855.25) MacaulayHist. Eng. III. xv. 558 "The expenses of the royal household are now entirely separated from the expenses of the civil government; but by a whimsical perversion, the name of Civil List has remained attached to..the revenue..appropriated to the expenses of the Royal Household. (1855)"

(1855.26) OwenSkel. &amp. Teeth 296 "The species restored by Cuvier from fossil remains..The great comparative anatomist called it anoplotherium. (1855)"

(1855.28) OwenComp. Anat. Invertebr. (ed. 2) 673 "*Germ-yolk, that portion of the primary yolk of the egg which is assimilated by the germ-cells in the formation of the germ-mass. In some animals the whole yolk is so assimilated, in others (sepia e.g.) only a small portion, the remainder being the `food-yolk', and absorbed by the future embryo or young animal. (1855)"

(1855.29) PuseyDoctr. Real Presence Note A. 31 "The remaining, then, of the `elements in their natural substances' was an open question. (1855)"

(1855.30) PuseyDoctr. Real Presence Note A. 5 "What those to whom he imputes `impanation' and `invination' really held, was that the Body and Blood of Christ was present `under the form of bread and wine', these `remaining in their natural substances'. (1855)"

(1855.31) PrescottPhilip II, I. ii. i. 154 "The work of the reformer was never accomplished so long as anything remained to reform. (1855)"

(1855.32) PuseyDoctr. Real Presence Note Q. 257 "The bread still remains in its own substance; yet so that the whole proposition should be understood, not as actually, but transitively. `This is my Body', i.e. passes into the body, or from this becomes the body. (1855)"

(1855.33) PrescottPhilip II, I. iii. v. 370 "His bloody head was set up opposite to that of his fellow-sufferer. For three hours these ghastly trophies remained exposed. (1855)"

(1855.37) SingletonVirgil I. 400 "Their very existence would have remained unknown, except for the geologist and the fossil. (1855)"

(1855.38) T. R. JonesAnim. Kingd. (ed. 2) 136 "While the segments of the Strobile remain conjoined, they seem to enjoy a complete community of life and of movement. (1855)"

(1855.39) TennysonBrook 191 "Poor Philip, of all his lavish waste of words Remains the lean P. W. on his tomb. (1855)"

(1855.40) W. ChappellPopular Music I. 309 "However unobjectionable this song may have been in Queen Mary's time, the three remaining stanzas would not be very courteously received in Queen Victoria's. Tempora mutantur. (1855)"

(1855.41) Cornwall 25 "Locust-like, they had devoured the edibles, and left us remains which were neither tender nor tempting. (1855)"

(1855.42) Orr's Circ. Sci., Elem. Chem. 217 "One half of the instrument [i.e. the electrophorus]-to which the term `sole' has been given-is now prepared, and it only remains to form the cover. (1855)"

(1855.43) Tait's Mag. XXII. 444/2 "We had rather the many-sided man should remain to us the mystery he is, than be Boswellised after the fashion which is now current. (1855)"

(1856.10) FerrierInst. Metaph. xiii. vi. 315 "No model whatever of matter per se being presentable to us in knowledge, the material universe per se must for ever remain absolutely irrepresentable by us in thought. (1856)"

(1856.11) FroudeHist. Eng. (1858) I. i. 68 "Out of the illuminations arose those paintings which remain unapproached and unapproachable in their excellence. (1856)"

(1856.12) FroudeHist. Eng. I. 28 "Like a train of gunpowder, the isolated grains of which have..no effect on each other, while they remain unignited. (1856)"

(1856.18) LeverMartins of Cro' M. 279 "The great fact remained unatoned for-his family, his own connexions, `had done nothing for him'. (1856)"

(1856.19) Mrs. C. Clarke tr. Berlioz' Instrument. 5 "The bass string can cross an upper open string..while the open string remains as a pedal. (1856)"

(1856.20) MassonEss. Biog. &amp. Crit. 109 "The property remaining..after the subduction of his own share as the eldest son. (1856)"

(1856.21) MerivaleRom. Emp. (1865) IV. xxxii. 13 "The provinces which remained under the control of the senate continued to be assigned by lot to consulars and praetorians. (1856)"

(1856.22) OlmstedSlave States 69 "Broad, silent pools, around the edges of which remained a skirt of ice, held there by bushes and long, broken water-grasses. (1856)"

(1856.23) P. ThompsonHist. Boston 725 "The mark of anything remaining after the thing itself has been removed, is called its steddle. (1856)"

(1856.24) RuskinMod. Paint. IV. v. xi. &sect.2. 130 "The most delicate sculptures if executed in good marble will remain for ages undeteriorated. (1856)"

(1856.25) W. IrvingLife Washington xcvi. III. 771 "The American and British armies, strongly posted,..remained four days grimly regarding each other. (1856)"

(1856.26) Jrnl. Soc. Arts IV. 402 "Mr. Applegarth..has also invented a beautiful little machine for printing the borders on silk handkerchiefs, called the *wheelbarrow machine, from its being worked by the hand round the cloth, which remains stationary. (1856)"

(1856.27) N. Brit. Rev. XXVI. 41 "To remain to the end of life destitute of any settled religious opinions. (1856)"

(1856.28) StonehengeBrit. Rur. Sports 144/1 "The remainder [of the otter-hunters] must watch every intervening yard for his `ventings'. (1856)"

(1857.1) Baden-Powell in Oxford Ess. 174 "The lingering remains of the old scholasticizing spirit. (1857)"

(1857.2) BuckleCiviliz. xii. (1903) II. 196 "The people remained in slavery until the Revolution actually occurred. (1857)"

(1857.3) ChambersInform. People I. 798/1 "Pantaloons, which fitted close to the leg, remained in very common use by those persons who had adopted them till about the year 1814, when the wearing of trousers, already introduced into the army, became fashionable. (1857)"

(1857.4) DunglisonDict. Med. s.v. Rhinoplastic, "The Tagliacotian operation..consists in bringing down a portion of flesh from the forehead, and causing it to adhere to the anterior part of the remains of the nose. (1857)"

(1857.5) G. F. McDougallEventful Voy. `Resolute' 426 "The remains of two ice houses yet existed, but were rapidly thawing away, under the influence of the heat of the sun. (1857)"

(1857.6) H. Spencer in Westm. Rev. Apr. 450 "The earliest known vertebrate remains are those of Fishes. (1857)"

(1857.21) V. LushJrnl. 18 Nov. (1971) 195 "As Norfolk Island is the nearest to New Zealand they touched there on their outward voyage and landed Mrs. Selwyn, who remained with the Pitcairners till the Southern Cross called for her on their way home. (1857)"

(1857.24) Chambers's Jrnl. 30 May 351/2 "To overcome it [sc. rolling and pitching]..the professor invented a balanced frame, with free axes for rotation, somewhat on the principle of the gyroscope, which..remains uninfluenced by the..movements of the ship. (1857)"

(1857.25) Chambers' Inform. II. 683/2 "The player..does his best to take the inwick or angle; and by a skilfully `laid on' stone..the inwick is taken; his stone glides off, angles towards the tee, knocks his adversary's stone out of shot-himself remaining in the while. (1857)"

(1857.26) Chambers' Inform. II. 693/1 "When players are very equally matched, neither party has, at the close of a day's play, gained an advantage; every round has been halved, hence the match itself is halved, and remains to be played another day. (1857)"

(1858.9) Ld. St. LeonardsHandy Bk. Prop. Law xiv. 89 "His prior disposition will..still remain good, nor will a re-conveyance to him upon paying off the money affect the validity of the will. (1858)"

(1858.10) LardnerHandbk. Nat. Phil. 255 "This thermometer is sometimes varied in its form and arrangement, but the principle remains the same. (1858)"

(1858.11) Ld. St. LeonardsHandy-Bk. Prop. Law ix. 62 "The tax has merged, and does not remain as a charge of which you can avail yourself. (1858)"

(1858.12) Ld. St. LeonardsHandy Bk. Prop. Law xvi. 107 "The Court may direct the parts so laid out to remain vested in the trustees. (1858)"

(1858.13) Ld. St. LeonardsHandy-Bk. Prop. Law xvii. 110 "The common settlement..is..then to the daughters, as tenants in common in tail, with cross-remainders in tail. (1858)"

(1858.14) Lady WilkinsonWeeds &amp. Wild Flowers 353 "An old belief continues to be connected with the circumstance of the dead roots of wormwood being black, and somewhat hard, and remaining for a long period undecayed beneath the living plant. They are then called `*wormwood coal'; and if placed under a lover's pillow they are believed to produce a dream of the person he loves. (1858)"

(1858.15) Ld. St. LeonardsHandy Bk. Prop. Law xvi. 105 "With special provisions as to minerals and the interests therein of remainder-men. (1858)"

(1858.22) Brit. Colonist (Victoria, B.C.) 11 Dec. 2/4 "The majority of the Lillooet *trail cutters would have remained had it not been grossly mismanaged. (1858)"

(1858.23) Rep. Maine Board Agric. 1857 II. 69 "The fish known as menhaden, and often called..`poggies', are..pressed..to extract an oil..; what remains after extracting the oil, is called `poggy chum'. (1858)"

(1858.24) Sat. Rev. 20 Nov. 496/1 "Up to the moment when Free-trade triumphed there remained a stolid mass of Protectionism against which argument was hopeless. (1858)"

(1858-60.1) J. GardnerFaiths World s.v., "Remains of the Inghamites are still found in England, but they are a very small body. (1858-"

(1858-9.1) ThackerayVirgin. lvi, "It may be that..there is a dreadfully scrappy dinner, the evident remains of a party to which I didn't invite you. (1858-"

(1859.7) E. H. N. Patterson in L. Hafen Overland Routes to Gold Fields (1942) 68 "This..is one of those cases, probably, that will remain a mystery only to be solved when the great item book of the recording angel shall be opened to justify the final sentence. (1859)"

(1859.8) F. A. GriffithsArtil. Man. 31 "The remaining companies first being faced to the right about. (1859)"

(1859.9) F. A. GriffithsArtil. Man. (1862) 260 "The Terraplein is the upper part of the rampart, which remains after having constructed the parapet. (1859)"

(1859.10) FarrarJ. Home 414 "An effort was made by his few remaining and unalienated friends to provide for him the means of emigration. (1859)"

(1859.11) F. FullerFive Yrs. Residence N.Z. ix. 162 "The Runholder kept the remaining portion as the payment for his trouble and expense in looking after the sheep. (1859)"

(1859.12) G. WilsonGateways Knowl. (ed. 3) 71 "The..Mammoth remains fresh as on the day of its death. (1859)"

(1859.13) G. SalmonLessons Introd. Mod. Higher Algebra xv. 125 "What we may call the orthogonal transformation is to transform simultaneously a given quadratic function, and x2 + y2 + z2 + w2 + &amp.., so that the latter remaining of the same form, the former may become Ax2 + By2 + Cz2 + Dw2 + &amp.. (1859)"

(1859.14) HawthorneMarb. Faun xi, "While there remains so much to be sinned and suffered in the world. (1859)"

(1859.21) MillLiberty i. 14 " The practical question, where to place the limit-how to make the fitting adjustment between individual independence and social control-is a subject on which nearly everything remains to be done. (1859)"

(1859.22) MacaulayHist. Eng. xxv. V. 287 "He fell down in a fit, and remained long insensible. (1859)"

(1859.23) MillLiberty v. (1865) 60/2 "This question presents no difficulty, so long as the will of all the persons implicated remains unaltered. (1859)"

(1859.24) MacaulayHist. Eng. xxiii. (1861) V. 34 "To pass a prospective statute tying up in strict entail the little which still remained of the Crown property. (1859)"

(1859.25) MacaulayHist. Eng. xxiv. V. 197 "From Charles neither the remains of his mother nor those of his grandfather could draw any sign of sensibility. (1859)"

(1859.27) PageHandbk. Geol. Terms, "Pliolophus, a small lophiodont mammal, whose remains have been found in eocene and miocene tertiaries. (1859)"

(1859.28) R. F. BurtonCentr. Afr. in Jrnl. Geogr. Soc. XXIX. 324 "The remainder of the dress is a *loin-cloth of white domestics or of indigo dyed cotton. (1859)"

(1859.29) ReeveBrittany 51 "One or two women..remained still long enough to be more defined in outline. (1859)"

(1859.30) R. F. BurtonCentr. Afr. in Jrnl. Geog. Soc. XXIX. 23 "There remained then for the English physicist the honour of depicting by an admirable generalization the true features of the African interior. (1859)"

(1859.40) North Amer. Rev. LXXXVIII. 492 "The chapel of St. Verena, where the *finger-prints of the young maiden still remain in the rock. (1859)"

(1859.41) Todd's Cycl. Anat. V. 537/1 "In the reticulum the walls remain smooth and do not exhibit any very evident traces of the contained water-cells. (1859)"

(1859.42) Times 4 Feb. 9/4 "That remains to be seen. (1859)"

(1860.1) BartlettDict. Amer. (ed. 3), "A pick-up dinner, called also simply a pick-up, is a dinner made up of such fragments of cold meats as remain from former meals. (1860)"

(1860.2) B'ness Bunsen in Hare Life II. v. 271 "The inscription on the cippus placed over the remains of the two children. (1860)"

(1860.3) FaradayForces of Nat. iii. 78 "Whenever a solid body loses some of that force of attraction by means of which it remains solid, heat is absorbed. (1860)"

(1860.4) FarrarOrig. Lang. (1865) 98 "If the entire lexicon of every language be capable of being reduced to a number of sensational roots,..Grammar always remains as the indisputable result of the pure reason. (1860)"

(1860.7) H. StuartSeaman's Catech. 74 "Where it rests on the stem is the bed, and the remainder the beeseating. (1860)"

(1860.8) H. StuartSeaman's Catech. 67 "What is termed the `filling'?..the intervals between the frame timbers are filled up solid..so that if the outside planks be injured a watertight surface would remain. (1860)"

(1860.9) HookLives Abps. I. 45 "The simple patriarchal faith..was never lost, and when the idolatrous superstitions were removed there still remained a substratum of truth. (1860)"

(1860.10) MauryPhys. Geog. Sea (Low) ii. &sect.95 "But for the forces of gravitation the waters of the Mississippi would remain at its fountain. (1860)"

(1860.12) MauryPhys. Geog. Sea i. &sect.67 "Notwithstanding all that has been done.. there still remain many agenda. (1860)"

(1860.13) MotleyNetherl. (1868) I. 24 "The new-risen republic remained for a season nebulous. (1860)"

(1860.14) O. W. HolmesProf. Breakf.-t. viii, "It only remained to be phrenologized. (1860)"

(1860.15) O. W. HolmesElsie V. xiv, "There are states of mind..which remain not only unworded, but unthoughted, if such a word may be coined for our special need. (1860)"

(1860.16) O. W. HolmesElsie V. xiv, "There are states of mind..which remain not only unworded, but *unthoughted. (1860)"

(1860.17) PuseyMin. Proph. 556 "In the way of justice He satisfied for men, delivering Himself for their faults to the pain of death, to satisfy the honour of the Divine Majesty, so that sin should not remain unpunished. (1860)"

(1860.18) PuseyMin. Proph. 454 "The carrion-remains should be entombed only in the bowels of vultures and dogs. (1860)"

(1860.34) N.Y. Times 6 Aug. 8/3 "The innovations of the `reform party'..which he [sc. Rabbi Isaacs] attributed to religious pride... The congregation..remained uncontaminated by these pretended reforms. (1860)"

(1860.35) Once a Week 21 July 95/2, "I fully admit that in later years we are all of us apt to grow sentimental about the traditions of our respective schools-I merely deny that we do so whilst we remain in statu pupillari. (1860)"

(1860.36) Slang Dict., "Grease-spot, a minute remnant, the only distinguishable remains of an antagonist after a terrific contest. (1860)"

(1860.37) Ure's Dict. Arts III. 427 "Tincturation. Musk,..ambergris,..vanilla, civet, and a few other odorous substances, yield their odours to spirit by tincturation, that is, by putting the fragrant material into the spirit and allowing it to remain..till the alcohol has extracted all the scent. (1860)"

(1861.4) DickensGt. Expect. xliii, "How long we might have remained in this ridiculous position it is impossible to say, but for the incursion of three thriving farmers-laid on by the waiter I think-who came into the coffee-room. (1861)"

(1861.5) DelamerFl. Garden 22 "Agapanthus..may be permitted to remain throughout the winter in the open ground, under a covering of litter or leaves. (1861)"

(1861.6) E. CowellDiary 1 Jan. in Cowells in Amer. (1934) 234, "I congratulated him on his remaining free from `tightness' after so many calls. (1861)"

(1861.7) J. R. GreeneMan. Anim. Kingd., C&ae.aeig;lent. 35 "Its homogeneous periplast [is] traversed in all directions by a complex mesh&dubh.work of threads, which remain quite distinct from the endoplasts about which they diverge. (1861)"

(1861.8) M. PattisonEss. (1889) I. 44 "With the exception of a dwelling-house.., the remainder of the area was covered with warehouses. (1861)"

(1861.31) W. FairbairnAddr. to Brit. Assoc., "In land telegraphy the chief difficulties have been surmounted, but in submarine telegraphy much remains to be accomplished. (1861)"

(1861.32) W. BellDict. Law Scot. 450/1 "Innovation, is a technical expression, signifying the exchange, with the creditor's consent, of one obligation for another; so as to make the second obligation come in the place of the first, and be the only subsisting obligation against the debtor, both the original obligants remaining the same. (1861)"

(1861.33) W. BellDict. Law Scot. 221 "In practice, it is usual to consign money in a public bank, so that the party entitled to it receives it with bank interest for the time it has remained consigned. (1861)"

(1861.34) 2nd Rep. Comm. Sewage Towns 28 "Ten Hereford oxen were tied up in a shed; two to be fed on unsewaged grass, and the remaining eight to receive sewaged grass. (1861)"

(1861.35) Morning Post 24 Oct., "The five remaining bays [of the choir]..have been restored; only three of them, though, will be within the reredos. (1861)"

(1861.36) Sat. Rev. 22 June 647/1 "These brasses are capable of being `rubbed', that is, of having an impression taken of them..by covering them with paper, and rubbing with some fitting substance upon the paper. A likeness of the brass is thus produced, the plain portions being dark, and the incisions remaining..white. (1861)"

(1861.37) Times 8 Nov. (Defeat of Federal Army), "A little after six o'clock the remaining contestants withdrew down the precipitous river bank. (1861)"

(1861.38) Times 24 Sept., "Three-fourths of the crop [of hops] will be of the best quality; the remainder was rusted by spiders towards the end of last month. (1861)"

(1862.4) A. MeadowsMan. Midwifery vi. ii. 217 "The longer it [sc. the placenta] is allowed to remain the more spastically does the uterus contract upon it. (1862)"

(1862.5) AnstedChannel Isl. iv. xxiii. (ed. 2) 539 "Encroachments on property are sometimes met by a very peculiar exclamatory appeal, called `Ha! Ro!' repeated thrice. It is considered to be the remains of an old appeal to Rollo, Duke of Normandy, and is followed by action. (1862)"

(1862.6) BurtonBk. Hunter 3 "If there be any remains of sculpture on the stone, it becomes a lythoglyph or a hieroglyph. (1862)"

(1862.8) BuckleCiviliz. (1869) III. ii. 86 "The principles on which Church authority is based remained intact. (1862)"

(1862.9) BuckleMisc. Wks. (1872) I. 18 "What we have done is but a speck compared to what remains to be done. (1862)"

(1862.10) C. C. MeehanLaw &amp. Practice of Game of Euchre v. 86 "Talon, the eleven cards remaining in the pack after the dealer has distributed five to each player and turned up the twenty-first card for the trump. (1862)"

(1862.11) D. WilsonPreh. Man II. xxii. 292 "When the Mandans buried the remains of their scaffolded dead, they left the skull uninterred. (1862)"

(1862.14) FairholtUp Nile 308 "The square columns..have been in some places literally chipped to pieces and a rude irregular core only remains. (1862)"

(1862.15) F. HallHindu Philos. Syst. 87 note, "That one such quality may displace another, their theory is, that the displacing quality must remain with the quality displaced during the last moment of the subsistence of the latter. (1862)"

(1862.25) RuskinMunera P. (1880) 27 "The science of Political Economy would remain..the weighing of clouds, and the portioning out of shadows. (1862)"

(1862.26) WaterstonMan. Commerce 303 "Status of an Annuity, the state of things during the continuance of which the annuity is to be paid. A compound status is one which exists as long as either of two or more status remain. (1862)"

(1862.27) W. A. MillerElem. Chem., Org. (ed. 2) 78 "According to G&eacu.lis, when sugar which has thus been melted is dissolved in water it furnishes a solution which when fermented with yeast yields only half the quantity of alcohol that ordinary sugar would have produced, a peculiar body to which he gives the name of saccharide (C12H10O10) remaining in solution. It exerts a slight rotatory power to the right upon a beam of polarized light. (1862)"

(1862.28) All Year Round 13 Sept. 8 "It assumes the pupa form, and is enclosed in a hard case, remaining motionless and to all appearance inanimate. (1862)"

(1862.29) Cornh. Mag. VI. 648 (Farmer) "Occasionally they [women] assist at a burglary- remaining outside and keeping watch; they are then called crows. (1862)"

(1862.30) Congress. Globe 27 Mar. 1402/2, "I..doubt..the ability of these guns to remain in their position if..struck fairly and squarely by shot from the enemy. (1862)"

(1862.31) Chambers's Encycl. IV. 645/1 "There remains..a large residue of pitch, which is again distilled.., giving off an oil called coke-oil. (1862)"

(1863.4) DentonNature's Secrets 95 "All fossil remains of animals are imbued with the feelings of the animals of which they formed a part, and, under their influence, the Psychometer..feels all that was felt by them... This branch of Psychometry may be termed Psychopathy. (1863)"

(1863.6) E. Atkinson tr. Ganot's Elem. Treat. Physics iv. i. 93 "Heat..converts liquids..into the aeriform state in which they obey all the laws of gases. This aeriform state of liquids is known by the name of vapour, while gases are bodies which, under ordinary temperature and pressure, remain in the aeriform state. (1863)"

(1863.7) FawcettPol. Econ. i. vi. 81 "After the centre of the field has been ploughed, the head&dubh.lands will remain to be ploughed separately. (1863)"

(1863.9) Geo. EliotRomola xxii, "[He] remained obstinately silent under all the strokes from the knotted cord. (1863)"

(1863.10) G. KearleyLinks in Chain, "A veritable anthropolite, the petrified remains of one of the accursed race that was swept away by the flood. (1863)"

(1863.11) HuxleyMan's Place Nat. iii. 125 "The lines of fracture which remain between the coadjusted pieces of the skull. (1863)"

(1863.12) H. CoxInstit. i. ix. 173 "In order to the first reading of a private bill in the House of Commons, a petition for leave to bring it in is first presented, by being deposited at the Private Bill Office. A certain interval of time is required to elapse between the first and second readings, during which the bill remains in the custody of the Private Bill Office. (1863)"

(1863.13) HuxleyMan's Place Nat. 159 "The fossil remains of man..do not..take us appreciably nearer to that lower pithecoid form. (1863)"

(1863.15) H. CoxInstit. iii. ii. 598 "At the conference at Paris, in 1856,..it was declared that, as to those Powers..`privateering is and remains abolished'. (1863)"

(1863.16) H. CoxInstit. ii. xi. 583 "[Of the Counties Palatine] there remain now only those of Lancaster and Durham..the latter formerly an ecclesiastical fee belonging to the Bishop of Durham. (1863)"

(1863.31) R. TownsendMod. Geom. I. vii. 145 "Thus, for instance, in a tetrastigm or tetragram every line of connection of two points or point of intersection of two lines is said to be the opposite of that of the remaining two. (1863)"

(1863.32) R. TownsendMod. Geom. I. 145 "In a hexastigm or hexagram every triangle determined by three points or lines is said to be the opposite of that determined by the remaining three. (1863)"

(1863.33) SalaCapt. Dangerous I. viii. 220, "I remained under charge of Ciceley of the Cindery. (1863)"

(1863.34) WattsDict. Chem. I. 759 "If the supply of air is limited, only the more volatile ingredients [of wood] burn away, and the greater part of the carbon remains behind. This is the principle of the process of *charcoal-burning. (1863)"

(1863.35) WattsDict. Chem. I. 297 "Oil of anise..appears to consist of two distinct oils, one of which solidifies at temperatures below 10&deg., while the other remains fluid at all temperatures. The former is generally known as anethol or anise-camphor. (1863)"

(1863.36) W. C. BaldwinAfr. Hunting ix. 377 "The lions had killed two zebras..and I set a stell (a spring gun) for them by the remains of one of the zebras. (1863)"

(1863.38) All Y. Round 11 July 467/1 "Ailanthine sericulture would remain in great measure unproductive. (1863)"

(1863.39) Gardener's Chron. 23 May 493 "The Silver Weed is a great pest in the arable field, and especially where some damp spots remain. (1863)"

(1863.40) Pilgrimage over Prairies I. 275 "Seeing how certain was my fate, remaining where I was, I darted towards the bank, to engage the fell sagittary at close quarters. (1863)"

(1863-72.1) WattsDict. Chem. I. 138 s.v. Alloxanic Acid, "An aqueous solution of alloxanic acid is decomposed by boiling, carbonic anhydride being abundantly evolved, and two new bodies formed, one of which..difluan, remains in solution, but may be precipitated by alcohol. (1863-"

(1864.15) KingsleyRom. &amp. Teut. 239 "The solitaries of the Thebaid found that they became selfish wild beasts, or went mad, if they remained alone. (1864)"

(1864.16) Ld. Deas in Scots Revised Rep. Ser. iii. (1902) III. 330 "The right of property in the lands remained with the wadsetter, subject to the burden of the wadset; and when the wadset was subsequently discharged, that burden was effectually wiped off. (1864)"

(1864.17) LewinsHer Majesty's Mails 265 "It only remains to refer for a moment to the timbromanie or stamp mania. (1864)"

(1864.19) TrevelyanCompet. Wallah (1866) 301 "He must go through the dreary remainder of life uncheered by friendship. (1864)"

(1864.20) TennysonAylmer's F. 294 "The sole succeeder to their wealth,..The last remaining pillar of their house. (1864)"

(1864.21) W. PoleTh. Whist (1870) 18 "Strengthening play is getting rid of high cards in any suit, the effect of which is to give an improved value to the lower cards of that suit still remaining in, and so to strengthen the hand that holds them. (1864)"

(1864.23) Chamb. Encycl. VI. 262/2 "Magnets, when freshly magnetised, are sometimes more powerful than they afterwards become. In that case, they gradually fall off in strength, till they reach a point at which their strength remains constant. This is called the point of saturation. (1864)"

(1864.24) Chambers' Bk. of Days II. 67/2 "It was as a means of devising a severe mode of punishment short of death that the Hulks on the Thames were introduced, in 1776... These prison-ships have sometimes been constructed for this special purpose, and yet the term `hulk' remains in use as a short and easy designation. (1864)"

(1864.25) Chambers' Bk. Days II. 233/2 "The heads of these two [Jacobites executed in 1746] were..stuck over Temple Bar, where they remained till 1772. (1864)"

(1864.29) Realm 11 May 5 "He has preferred to remain..unenriched by the events which have enriched..others. (1864)"

(1864.30) Social Sc. Rev. 403 "Four-wheeled Clarence Cabs, seated for four passengers within and one in addition to the driver without, have long remained without any material alteration. (1864)"

(1864.31) Sat. Rev. 10 Dec. 726/1 "All spiritual belief came to be laughed at.. There was no more account of Stahl and `animism.' Nothing but sheer materialism remained. (1864)"

(1864.32) Spectator 9 Apr. 423 "The greater part of periodical literature is meant to be, and ought to remain, fugitive. (1864)"

(1864.33) Trans. Linn. Soc. XXV. 35 "There remain therefore only the characters of the perfect insect, the most important of which are the anal valves in the male. These..are furnished with projecting points or spines..which serve to attach the male more firmly to the female in copul&acirc.. (1864)"

(1865.13) LivingstoneZambesi xxi. 434 "It is dangerous to remain in their villages at this time of year when kidnappers are abroad. (1865)"

(1865.14) LubbockPreh. Times 323 "Even if the embankment had remained intact to this day. (1865)"

(1865.15) MerivaleRom. Emp. VIII. lxiv. 100 "The last remains we possess of classical Latinity are the biographies of the later emperors. (1865)"

(1865.16) MerivaleRom. Emp. VIII. lxiv. 126 "Remains have been detected, at the bottom of the lucent Nemi, of a wooden ship or raft. (1865)"

(1865.17) PageHandbk. Geol. Terms, "Stonesfield Slate,..celebrated for its being the rock in which English geologists first detected mammalian remains..of Secondary epoch. (1865)"

(1865.18) Pusey in Liddon, etc. Life (1897) IV. iii. 80 "We cannot divide Holy Scripture or Christianity, polypus-like, so that one part might be cut off, and the rest remain in the same life as before. (1865)"

(1865.19) PuseyTruth Eng. Ch. 60 "S. Meletius remained in the communion of the Easterns. (1865)"

(1865.24) T. WrightHist. Caricat. xvi. (1875) 277 "The word interlude remained long in our language as applied to such short and simple dramatic pieces as we may suppose to have formed the drolleries of the mysteries. (1865)"

(1865.31) Hotten's Slang Dict., "Manablins, broken victuals. Menavelings, odd money remaining after the daily accounts are made up at a railway booking-office,-usually divided among the clerks. (1865)"

(1865.32) Massachusetts Hist. Soc. Coll. VII. 584 "John, the third son of James Rogers, of New London, and the founder of the sect of Rogerenes, of whom a small number still remain in that vicinity. (1865)"

(1865.35) Sat. Rev. 7 Jan. 18/1 "The law of entail enables a landowner..to give to a person yet unborn the remaindership of his estate. (1865)"

(1865.36) tr. Erckmann-Chatrian's Waterloo ii. 10, "I had rather remain poor and hardworking, than become rich and well-thought-of in this manner. (1865)"

(1865-72.1) WattsDict. Chem. III. 248 "The indiretin which still remains in solution is separated by ammonia. (1865-"

(1865-72.2) WattsDict. Chem. III. 237 "Half the bromine is precipitated as bromide of silver, while the other half remains in solution as hypobromous acid. (1865-"

(1865-72.3) WattsDict. Chem. III. 314 "The black scales which remain when native platinum is dissolved in nitromuriatic acid were found by Smithson Tennant to consist of an alloy of two metals, iridium and osmium, hence called iridosmine. (1865-"

(1866.23) Reader July 676 "The remaining part of the book respects man's position. (1866)"

(1866.24) Sat. Rev. 21 July 66/1 "The Quadrilateral and Venice still remain in the hands of the Austrians. (1866)"

(1866.25) Treas. Bot., "Collenchyma..usually absorbed, but remaining and assuming a definite form in some plants, as in orchids. (1866)"

(1866-8.1) WattsDict. Chem. IV. 369 "When pectin..is heated to 200&deg., water and carbonic anhydride are evolved, and *pyropectic acid remains in the form of a black substance, insoluble in water, but soluble in alkaline liquids... Fr&eacu.my deduces the formula C14H18O9. (1866-"

(1866-80.1) A. FlintPrinc. Med. (ed. 5) 41 "The term hypertrophy is applied to enlargement of a part from an increase of its normal constituents, the structure and arrangement remaining essentially unaltered. (1866-"

(1867.1) A. J. EllisE.E. Pronunc. i. iv. 342 "It must remain an undecided question whether Chaucer would or would not have elided the vowel. (1867)"

(1867.8) FreemanNorm. Conq. I. iv. &sect.3. 206 "Charles remained for some while a puppet in the hands of Herbert. (1867)"

(1867.9) FreemanNorm. Conq. I. v. 338 "Up to the time of &Ae.AElig;thelstan Exeter had remained..a common possession of Teutonic and Celtic inhabitants. No doubt there was an English and a Welsh town, an Englishry and a Welshry. (1867)"

(1867.17) PuseyEleven Addr. ix. (1908) 108 "It is a graver thing, if a duty, impressed on us in our very earliest childhood,..remained stunted to its then measure. (1867)"

(1867.18) SmythSailor's Word-bk., "Standing Warrants, those officers who remain with a ship in ordinary, or on the stocks, as the gunner, carpenter, boatswain, and cook, and till 1814 the purser. (1867)"

(1867.19) SmythSailor's Word-bk., "Genouillere, that part of a battery which remains above the platform, and under the gun after the opening of the embrasure. Of course a knee-step. (1867)"

(1867.20) SmilesHuguenots Eng. iv. (1880) 55 "The people who remained were at length terrified into orthodoxy. (1867)"

(1867.21) SmythSailor's Word-bk., "*Pivot-ship, in certain fleet evolutions, the sternmost ship remains stationary, as a pivot on which the other vessels are to form the line anew. (1867)"

(1867.22) SmythSailor's Work-bk, "Watch,..the word is also applied to the time during which the watch remains on deck, usually four hours, with the exception of the dog-watches. (1867)"

(1867.23) SmythSailor's Word-bk., "Lie off! an order given to a boat to remain off on her oars till permission is given for her to come alongside. (1867)"

(1867.24) SmythSailor's Word-bk. 103 "A ship is `brought up to a bitter' when the cable is allowed to run out to that stop..When a chain or rope is paid out to the bitter-end, no more remains to be let go. (1867)"

(1867.25) SmythSailor's Word-bk., "Winter-quarters,..in Arctic parlance, the spot where ships are to remain housed during the winter months-from the 1st October to the 1st July or August. (1867)"

(1867.26) SmythSailor's Word-bk. 705 "Ullage, the remainder in a cask or package which has leaked or been partially used. (1867)"

(1867.27) SmythSailor's Word-bk., "Weather-coil, when a ship has her head brought about, so as to lie that way which her stern did before, as by the veering of the wind; or the motion of the helm, the sails remaining trimmed. Weather-coiling, a ship resuming her course after being taken aback; rounding off by a stern-board, and coming up to it again. (1867)"

(1867.28) Thomson &amp. TaitNat. Phil. I. i. &sect.40 "The remainder of the curve satisfies a modified form of statement of the original question, and is called the Curve of Flight. (1867)"

(1867.29) Thomson &amp. TaitTreat. Nat. Philos. I. i. 130 "A free point has three degrees of freedom, inasmuch as the most general displacement which it can take is resolvable into three, parallel respectively to any three directions, and independent of each other... If the point be constrained to remain always on a given surface, one degree of constraint is introduced, or there are left but two degrees of freedom. (1867)"

(1868.5) J. W. Dawson in Proc. Amer. Assoc. Advancement Sci. XVI. 118 "These rocks..having been ascertained to be Devonian, there still remained an immense thickness of underlying rocks of uncertain age... It is proposed to call this series, represented in New Brunswick by the St. John slates, the Acadian Series. (1868)"

(1868.6) KinglakeCrimea (1877) IV. ix. 230 "It is only by an isthmus..of high land that the triangular quoin remains joined to the bulk of the Chersonese. (1868)"

(1868.15) RogersPol. Econ. xii. (ed. 3) 165 "As the rent of land is that which remains over and above the cost of production, it is paid last, i.e. when all the other contributories are satisfied. (1868)"

(1868.21) W. JamesLet. 5 Apr. in R. B. Perry Tht. &amp. Char. W. James (1935) I. xv. 269 "To the Greeks a thing was evil only transiently and accidentally... Bystanders could remain careless and untouched-no after-brooding, no disinterested hatred of it in se, and questioning of its right to darken the world. (1868)"

(1868.22) Pall Mall G. 2 Dec. 8 "The Law Advisership to the Castle is the most important of the remaining appointments. (1868)"

(1868.24) Rep. U.S. Commissioner Agric. (1869) 297 "The remains of the uneaten leaves must be carefully taken away. (1868)"

(1868.25) Rep. to Govt. U.S. Munitions War 120 "It [the ore] is then allowed to remain exposed to the air for a time long enough to permit the small traces of sulphur to be dissipated, [etc.]... This process is termed maceration. (1868)"

(1869.12) T. H. TannerPract. Med. (ed. 6) II. 349 "Where the uterus is bent and its fundus fixed to the right or left side, the cervix remaining in the median line (latero&dubh.flexion) this deviation from the natural position will [etc.]. (1869)"

(1869.13) TyndallNotes on Light 40 "Colour is due to the extinction of certain constituents of the white light within the body, the remaining constituents which return to the eye imparting to the body its colour. (1869)"

(1869.14) TyndallNotes Lect. Light 27 "An electric spark is sensibly instantaneous; but the impression it makes upon the eye remains for some time after the spark has passed away... Wheatstone's Photometer is based on this persistence. (1869)"

(1870.4) BentleyBot. 171 "When they remain as little leaflets on each side of the base of the petiole, but quite distinct from it, they are called caulinary. (1870)"

(1870.5) D. J. KirwanPalace &amp. Hovel xxxii. 481 "When the dancing places..close, this door remains open to catch all stray night birds who can find no other resting place. (1870)"

(1870.6) E. R. Lankester in Q. Jrnl. Geol. Soc. XXVI. 499, "I have..spent a good deal of time in working at the nodules, which I propose to call `*Box-stones', since the name of `boxes' has been applied to those which exhibit the remains of a shell on being broken open by the phosphate-diggers of Suffolk. (1870)"

(1870.15) M. GloverGuide Isle of Man 189 "Such as are intended for red herrings are first `royled', or rubbed with salt, in which they remain for two or three days. (1870)"

(1870.16) Miss BridgmanRo. Lynne xiii, "The carpets..remained hidden from sight by the cleanest of druggets. (1870)"

(1870.17) NicholsonZool. 210 "In some of the Hemiptera..the apices [of the anterior wings] remain membranous, and to these the term `hemelytra' is applied. (1870)"

(1870.18) NicholsonMan. Zool. I. 96 "There are no fossil remains which would be universally conceded to be of a Hydrozoal nature. (1870)"

(1870.19) RollestonAnim. Life p. xxv, "`Phylogenies', or hypothetical genealogical pedigrees, reaching far out of modern periods, are likely to remain in the very highest degree arbitrary and problematical. (1870)"

(1870.20) RogersHist. Gleanings Ser. ii. 93 "He took credit to himself that..her son remained stanch. (1870)"

(1870.21) S. GeeAuscult. &amp. Percuss. ii. &sect.2 &page.1 "Whether the anapnograph will be more useful remains to be seen. (1870)"

(1870.22) Athen&ae.aeig;um 2 July 8 "Enough would have remained, despite many errors, many seeings of things which cannot be seen, to leave the book..interesting. (1870)"

(1870.23) Colburn's United Service Mag. 367 "The only thing then remaining to be done was to fit the Martini breech to the Henry barrel, and thus we have the Martini-Henry rifle complete. (1870)"

(1870.24) Daily News 17 Dec., "The remaining forty, well armed, ammunitioned, and in good condition, established themselves in two or three private houses. (1870)"

(1870.25) Daily News 16 Feb., "The remainder of the establishment consisting chiefly of the river frontage, will then be sold in plots. (1870)"

(1870.27) Mainland Guardian (New Westminster, B.C.) 16 Apr. 3/3 "There trip about a few Tenass-men, some with the remains of an old coat and beaver hat, and some [in] almost naked savagedom. (1870)"

(1870.28) Proc. Soc. Antiq. Scotland VII. 154 "The distinctive terms for a house built with lime-mortar, or without it, remain the same... In the northern islands it is still a White-house, and in the Western Highlands it is Tigh-gal. (1870)"

(1870.29) Standard 12 Dec., "Those battalions that still remained and paced briskly to and fro by their stacked arms to warm themselves. (1870)"

(1871.1) A. J. C. HareWalks in Rome I. vi. 277 "It has been decided that some remains which exist in the garden of the Villa Mills (now a Convent of Visitandine Nuns) are those of the House of Hortensius. (1871)"

(1871.10) C. H. OwenMod. Artillery 133 "The solid residue (from the powder) left within the bore after firing, would..foul the bore if allowed to remain in it; but this residue is got rid of by the lubricator. The lubricator consists of three parts. (1871)"

(1871.11) CookeFungi (1874) 34 "The spinulose projections from the capillitium..are the remains of pedicels. (1871)"

(1871.12) FreemanNorm. Conq. (1876) IV. xviii. 220 "The ruins of the Roman town still remained as a quarry; where all who would might seek materials for their own buildings. (1871)"

(1871.19) L. StephenPlaygr. Eur. (1894) iv. 100 "An ominous shake of the head supplied the remainder of the sentence. (1871)"

(1871.20) MorleyCarlyle in Crit. Misc. Ser. i. 237 "The most important question that we can ask of any great teacher, as of the walk and conversation of any commonest person, remains this, how far has he [etc.]. (1871)"

(1871.24) T. C. PopeCouncil of Vatican 236 "He required a period of nearly six weeks to complete the remaining portion of the journey to Rome. He commenced the ascent of the Alpine reeks on a Friday. (1871)"

(1872.22) Chem. News, 17 May 239/1 "The respirator is suspended for ten or fifteen minutes over some strong solution of ammonia in a large beaker; in this way the charcoal absorbs a very large amount of ammoniacal gas... The wearer can remain for a considerable time in an atmosphere containing chlorine without suffering any inconvenience. (1872)"

(1872.23) Daily News 26 June, "On Monday next, 1st July, the remainder of the metropolis roads north of the Thames will be `disturnpiked.' " (1872)"

(1872.24) Routledge's Ev. Boy's Ann. 201/1 "What was our surprise to see the ruby-throat..remain with the young ones. (1872)"

(1872.25) Mark TwainRoughing It l. 357 "There'll be a double-barreled inquest here..and your remainders will go home in a couple of baskets. (1872)"

(1872-6.1) Voyle &amp. StevensonMilit. Dict. (ed. 3) 232 "These regiments are termed linked, and in the case of one of the regiments going or being on foreign service requiring men to make up its numbers, soldiers are drafted from the regiment remaining at home. (1872-"

(1873.1) AldrichMarj. Daw 150 "The hotel remains to-day pretty much the same as when Jonathan Bayley handed in his accounts in 1840. (1873)"

(1873.12) H. RogersOrig. Bible viii. (1875) 354 "The remains of Clement and Polycarp and such fragments of Ignatius as criticism pronounces..genuine. (1873)"

(1873.13) Hayne in Tristram Moab 397 "Some stumps [of palm-trees] remain not petrified, but, if I may be allowed the expression, `sulphurised'. (1873)"

(1873.14) H. WattsFownes' Chem. 251 "Suppose one or more of the component atoms of a fully saturated molecule to be removed: it is clear that the remaining atom or group of atoms will no longer be saturated... Such unsaturated groups are called residues or radicals. (1873)"

(1873.15) HamertonIntell. Life x. iii. (1875) 349 "The greater number have to remain in positions of obscurity. (1873)"

(1873.16) HamertonIntell. Life x. iii. (1875) 352 "Her mind irrigated their minds, which would have remained permanently barren without that help and refreshment. (1873)"

(1873.18) KleinHandb. Physiol. Lab. iii. 45 "It remains to describe the so-called adenoid tissue. By this term is understood, a dense reticulum of branched cells, the processes of which are short but of great delicacy. (1873)"

(1873.19) Lytton in Life (1883) I. 101 "My grandfather..in youth..was a Utopian, and remained to the last much more than a `Whig'. (1873)"

(1873.20) MivartElem. Anat. 35 "The narrow lower end [of the sternum], which projects freely and remains cartilaginous till late in life, is called the xiphoid process. (1873)"

(1873.21) MaxwellElectr. &amp. Magn. &sect.381 II. 7 "When a dipolar quantity is turned end for end it remains the same as before. Tensions and pressures in solid bodies, Extensions, Compressions and Distortions, and most of the optical, electrical, and magnetic properties of crystallized bodies are dipolar quantities. (1873)"

(1873.22) MillAutobiogr. vii. 302 "The two greatest improvements which remain to be made in Representative Government... One of them was Personal, or, as it is called with equal propriety, Proportional Representation. (1873)"

(1873.23) M. Dewey in G. Dawe Melvil Dewey (1932) 320 "Sub-classify each, or any, of these eighty-one (hundred) classes... A Dictionary of Science would receive no *sub-classification but remain simply with main class number. (1873)"

(1873.24) R. B. Carter in Lancet, 20 Dec. 872/1 "The very existence of these `sago grains' remained unknown until the year 1848, when they were discovered by Dr. L&ouml.ffler. (1873)"

(1873.25) StubbsConst. Hist. III. xxi. 561 "In those towns in which there was no mayor, the presidency of the local courts remained with the bailiffs. (1873)"

(1873.27) SalmonHigher Plane Curves v. (1879) 134 "If any conic be described through four fixed points on a cubic, the chord joining the two remaining intersections of the conic with the cubic will pass through a fixed point on the cubic...This point..is called the coresidual of the system of four points... Two points which are coresidual must coincide. (1873)"

(1873.28) SymondsGrk. Poets xii. 420 "Yet the spirit and the flesh still remained in unreconciled antagonism. (1873)"

(1873.29) S. W. CozzensMarvellous Country 76 "We came upon the remains of a petrified forest,..converted by some chemical process into specimens of variegated jasper. (1873)"

(1873.30) TristramMoab v. 78 "Ibrahim..was never able to take Kerak, whose proud boast is that it yet remains a virgin city. (1873)"

(1873.31) W. K. SullivanO'Curry's Anct. Irish I. Introd. 283 "A Trosca or fasting was made by the plaintiff going to the defendant's house, and remaining there for a certain time..before making his distress. (1873)"

(1874.25) J. GeikieGt. Ice Age iii. 26 "It..opens up new channels of discovery which otherwise might have remained unsuspected and unknown. (1874)"

(1874.26) J. D. HeathCroquet-player 71 "Red, instead of playing thus,..completes the wiring, remaining near the hoop as before. (1874)"

(1874.27) KnightDict. Mech. s.v., "The chip is loaded at the circular edge so as to float upright, about two thirds being immersed in water..The chip or log being thrown overboard catches in the water and remains about stationary there, while the cord unwinds as the vessel proceeds. (1874)"

(1874.28) L. StephenHours in Library (1892) I. iii. 109 "The jewels have remained after the flimsy embroidery..has fallen into decay. (1874)"

(1874.29) MahaffySoc. Life Greece ix. 278 "The fact remains a very curious monument of the modernness of Attic life. (1874)"

(1874.31) ParkerGoth. Archit. i. iii. 39 "The remainder of the eleventh century may be considered as a period of transition. (1874)"

(1874.32) ParkerGoth. Archit. i. iii. 89 "Part of the great Norman hall remains, now converted into the servants' hall. (1874)"

(1874.33) S. J. P. ThearleNaval Archit. (Adv. Sci. ser.) iv. xx. 340 "The balanced rudder revolves about an axis so situated that about two-thirds the area of the rudder is on the aft, and the remaining one-third on the fore side of the axis. (1874)"

(1874.40) WoodNat. Hist. 282 "In the `castings' of this species have been found the remains of mice. (1874)"

(1874.41) Rifle Exerc., etc. 40 "Seize the guard with the forefinger and thumb of the right hand..the remaining fingers under the hammer. (1874)"

(1874.42) tr. Lommel's Light 14 "An opaque body is illuminated on that side of its surface only which is turned towards the light, its opposite surface, as well as a space covered by it, the shadow, remains dark. (1874)"

(1875.1) W. McIlwraithGuide Wigtownshire 136 "A workman, in making an excavation near the mill-ring, came on a large, flat stone, aneath which were the remains of a clay urn. (1875)"

(1875.2) W. McIlwraithGuide Wigtownshire 27 "Near the cross-roads are the remains of a cairn. (1875)"

(1875.4) Bennett &amp. DyerSachs' Bot. 396 "If a microsporangium is about to be formed, each of the mother-cells is broken up into four tetrahedral spores, which all develope into microspores; in the macrosporangium, on the contrary, the mother-cells remain, with one exception, undivided. (1875)"

(1875.5) Bennett &amp. Dyer tr. Sachs' Bot. 678 "The power of movement in plants is lost when they have remained in the dark for a considerable time..; in other words, they become rigid by long exposure to darkness..; the exposure to light must continue for a considerable time..before the motile condition which I have termed `Phototonus' is restored. (1875)"

(1875.6) B. MeadowsClin. Observ. 22 "The papul&ae.aeig; remain, a hair plainly seen in the centre of each. (1875)"

(1875.12) Bennett &amp. DyerSachs' Bot. 707 "The permanent curvature which remains..or the Curvature of Concussion, is the result of a lengthening of the convex and a simultaneous contraction of the concave side. (1875)"

(1875.14) Bennett &amp. Dyer tr. Sachs' Bot. 678 "Both the periodic and paratonic movement..is lost when they [the plants] have remained in the dark for a considerable time, such as a whole day; in other words, they become rigid by long exposure to darkness. (1875)"

(1875.15) DigbyReal Prop. (1876) 378 "He may at common law surrender his estate to the remainderman or reversioner by simple deed. (1875)"

(1875.16) DarwinInsectiv. Pl. vi. 87 "After the tentacles have remained closely clasped over any object. (1875)"

(1875.17) E. DowdenShakspere: his Mind &amp. Art i. 37 "Prospero must forever have remained somewhat apart and distinguished from other Dukes..by virtue of the enchanted island and the marvellous years of mageship. (1875)"

(1875.18) FortnumMaiolica i. 10 "Remains of furnaces and fragments of Roman time and tiles with the stamp of Theodoric. (1875)"

(1875.20) Huxley in Encycl. Brit. I. 130/2 "The Zoanthid&ae.aeig; differ from the Actinid&ae.aeig; in little more than their multiplication by buds, which remain adherent, either by a common connecting mass or c&oe.nosarc or by stolons. (1875)"

(1875.25) JowettPlato (ed. 2) IV. 25, "I will reserve the analysis of the remainder for another occasion. (1875)"

(1875.26) JowettPlato (ed. 2) I. 29, "I remain as stupid as ever; for still I fail to comprehend. (1875)"

(1875.27) JowettPlato (ed. 2) III. 137 "There too he may remain undazzled by wealth or the allurements of evil. (1875)"

(1875.28) J. W. BensonTime &amp. Time-Tellers (1902) 126 "By means of a contrivance, known to engineers as plumber blocks, any part of the mechanism may be removed without disturbing the remainder. (1875)"

(1875.48) StubbsConst. Hist. I. v. 91 "In the courts of the manor are transacted the other remaining portions of the old township jurisdiction; the enforcing of pains and penalties on the breakers of by-laws, etc. (1875)"

(1875.49) ScrivenerLect. Text N. Test. 4 "Not of the Bible only, but of those precious remains of profane literature. (1875)"

(1875.50) Sir G. JesselLaw Rep. 10 Chanc. Appeals 391 "That peculiar position of reversioner or remaindersman which is oddly enough described as an expectant heir. This phrase is used, not in its literal meaning, but as including..every one who has the hope of succession to the property of an ancestor. (1875)"

(1875.51) T. HolmesTreat. Surg. xxi. 386 "When the *scar-tissue remains permanent, although the scar is ugly and of lower organisation than the natural parts, yet it causes no important inconvenience. (1875)"

(1875.53) UreDict. Arts III. 187 s.v. Malting, "After remaining in the couch twenty-four hours..the couch is broken, that is, the planks composing the front of it are removed. (1875)"

(1875.54) UreDict. Arts I. 105 "[Alum] seems to have come to Europe in later times as alum of Rocca, the name of Edessa; but it is not impossible that this name was an Italian prefix, which has remained to this day under the name of Rock Alum, Allume di Rocca. (1875)"

(1875.55) W. McIlwraithGuide Wigtownshire 138 "Here are the remains of a doon, or of a circular tower of some sort. (1875)"

(1875.56) Encycl. Brit. 407/2 " The catcher, pitcher, first and third basemen, and short-stop comprise the in-field; the remainder the out-field. (1875)"

(1875.57) Blackw. Mag. Apr. 443 "Balance, long familiar to American ears, is becoming so to ours. In an account of a ship on fire we read `Those saved remained the balance of the night watching the burning wreck.' " (1875)"

(1875.58) Circular No. 8, War Dept. 1 May 144 "The white Americans form a comparatively small proportion of the population of Key West, the remainder being Bahama negroes, Cuban refugees, and white natives of the Bahamas and their descendants, classified here under the general title of Conchs. (1875)"

(1875.59) Encycl. Brit. II. 336 "[The bones of] other extinct mammals, alongside of human remains and works of art, in the famous Aurignac caves of the Pyrenees. (1875)"

(1875.60) Encycl. Brit. III. 3/2 "Athens before the Persian war..was surrounded by a ring-wall of narrow circuit, some..traces of which are supposed to remain. (1875)"

(1876.2) BartholowMat. Med. (1879) 149 "It may appear to be a work of super&dubh.erogation to notice the popular fallacy that quinia..remains combined with the textures of the body. (1876)"

(1876.3) BancroftHist. U.S. III. xiii. 208 "Two regiments composed of Pennsylvanians, Marylanders, and Virginians, remained as a garrison. (1876)"

(1876.4) Balfour in Encycl. Brit. IV. 142/1 "The union..may take place by the ovaries alone, while the styles and stigmata remain free, the pistil being then *gamogastrous. (1876)"

(1876.5) DouseGrimm's L. &sect.17. 34 "The meanings of the several primitives are in general so widely different that the homonymous derivatives remain to all time clearly distinguished in use. (1876)"

(1876.8) DigbyReal Prop. v. 227 "A remainder is created by express words at the same time as the particular estate, and is so limited as to come into enjoyment or possession so soon as the particular estate comes to an end. (1876)"

(1876.9) DigbyReal Prop. vi. 295 "It became a common practice for a man upon his marriage to convey lands to feoffees to the joint use of himself and his wife for life or in tail, by which means a provision for the remainder of her life was secured to the wife. This was called a jointure. (1876)"

(1876.10) E. MellorPriesth. vi. 281 "The sacrament will remain a witness and a warning, even if its participators should eat and drink unworthily. (1876)"

(1876.12) FreemanNorm. Conq. V. xxiv. 385 "The days of King Eadward remained the standard, every departure from which was noticed as a novelty. (1876)"

(1876.13) FirthMunic. Lond. 50 "The name of `Livery Company' has remained... The control by Master or Wardens of the dress of members has ceased. (1876)"

(1876.14) FergussonInd. &amp. East. Archit. i. iii. 57 "The difficulty was met by assigning a portion [of the remains of Buddha] to each of the contending parties, who are said to have erected stupas to contain them. (1876)"

(1876.15) F. H. BradleyEth. Studies ii. 59 "What remains is to point out the most general expression for the end in itself, the ultimate practical `why'; and that we find in the word self-realization. (1876)"

(1876.16) GrantBurgh Sch. Scotl. i. i. 3 note, "The polity of Scotland remained as yet Celtic, though it very soon afterwards became feudal. (1876)"

(1876.17) GreenShort Hist. i. &sect.4 (1882) 37 "Forty-five works remained after his death to attest his prodigious industry. (1876)"

(1876.18) GrantBurgh Sch. Scotl. ii. iii. 132 "To remain in ward until he find caution not to contravene the act of council. (1876)"

(1876.19) GladstoneGlean. (1879) II. 350 "To a bad clergyman this may be an advantage, in respect that it allows him to remain bad, and to grow worse with impunity. (1876)"

(1876.22) J. BurroughsWinter Sunshine i. 23 "About the only genuine shouting Methodists that remain are to be found in the coloured churches. (1876)"

(1876.23) Mrs. G. L. BanksManch. Man xviii. (1902) 79 "Nadin..followed up the clue to a *waste&dubh.dealer's who bought at his own price workpeople's `waste' (i.e. warp, weft, silk, &amp.c. remaining after work was completed). (1876)"

(1876.24) MozleyUniv. Serm. vii. 147 "We have those appetites so long as we remain in the flesh. (1876)"

(1876.25) OuidaWinter City iii. 59 "Art had remained with her rather an intellectual dissipation than a tenderness. (1876)"

(1876.26) Preece &amp. SivewrightTelegraphy 303 "The soldering iron, and fire-pot,..are more or less cumbersome, and lead to unsoldered joints remaining in the wire. (1876)"

(1876.27) Preece &amp. SivewrightTelegraphy 19 "Batteries such as those described..will remain in constant action for a month... At the expiration of a month it becomes necessary to refresh them. (1876)"

(1876.28) Stainer &amp. BarrettDict. Mus. Terms 274/2 "The German lied, the sacred lied or chorale..was founded upon the ecclesiastical modes and remained unchanged until the days of the Minnesingers. (1876)"

(1876.29) SpencerPrinc. Sociol. (1877) I. 3 "The four Volumes, that have followed First Principles, have dealt with Organic Evolution... We have now to enter upon the remaining division-Superorganic Evolution. (1876)"

(1876.31) Voyle &amp. StevensonMilit. Dict., "*Militia Reserve, a force created by the act of 1867; its numbers not to exceed one-fourth of militia quota; the men to be enlisted for five years, during which time they remain on the strength of militia regiments, but are liable to be drafted into the army in time of war. (1876)"

(1876.32) Voyle &amp. StevensonMilit. Dict. 334/1 "A recruit remains a recruit from the date of his enlistment until he has passed his drill, which extends generally to 16 weeks. (1876)"

(1876.33) W. BegbieBk. Med. Inform. &amp. Advice App. 251 "Digitalis is what is called a cumulative medicine: its effects are sometimes not immediately produced; but each successive dose remaining in the system, these may be seen even after the medicine is discontinued. (1876)"

(1876.34) Constructive Rationalism 5 "The destruction of orthodox Christianity being accomplished, there remains for the Rationalist much more to do. He has to frame a code which shall rule in the place of the code of Moses and of Jesus. (1876)"

(1876.35) Encycl. Brit. V. 520/2 "The study of the remaining elements and of their compounds constituting inorganic, or, as it is also termed, mineral chemistry. (1876)"

(1876.36) Haygarth's Cricket Scores v. 16 "[G. H. Wright was engaged] on the Bramhall Ground, at Sheffield, where he still remains as *groundkeeper. (1876)"

(1876.37) Jrnl. Chem. Soc. ii. 234 "The contamination of the printed cotton with iron is thus prevented, and only the pure alumina lake, that is to say, the pure alizarin-red, remains upon the cotton. (1876)"

(1876.39) Quain's Elem. Anat. (ed. 8) II. 821 "In the sow and several ruminants..the subdivided upper tubular part or epoophoron has disappeared, and the main part (middle part of the Wolffian duct) remains in the duct of Gaertner, a strong, slightly undulated tube. (1876)"

(1876.40) tr. Wagner's Gen. Pathol. 189 "An autochthonous or primitive thrombus is one which remains confined in the part in which it first arose, especially in the heart. (1876)"

(1877.1) A. B. EdwardsUp Nile xiv. 385 "Rameses the Second..remains to this day the representative Pharaoh of a line of monarchs whose history covers a space of fifty centuries. (1877)"

(1877.2) BlackmoreCripps II. viii. 125 "His outward faculties..rendered to his inward and endiathetic organs a picture, a schema, a plasm-the proper word may be left to him-such as would remain inside, at least while the mind abode there. (1877)"

(1877.25) L. H. MorganAncient Society ii. vi. 181 "The question of the organization of these, and the remaining Nahuatlac tribes of Mexico, in gentes will be considered in the next ensuing chapter. (1877)"

(1877.30) RaymondStatist. Mines &amp. Mining 398 "A dead roast, as it is called, or the elimination of that portion of sulphur which, after oxidation, remains combined as sulphate of copper, is to be avoided. (1877)"

(1877.34) Ray Lankester in Q. Jrnl. Microsc. Sci. 428 "When once the c&ae.aeig;lom is accomplished as a cavity definitely shut off from the `metenteron'-the name we now give to what remains of the archenteron. (1877)"

(1877.35) StevensonWill o' the Mill i, "Only he, it seemed, remained behind, like a stock upon the wayside. (1877)"

(1877.36) StainerHarmony xii. &sect.150 "A transition is the rapid passing through any key, without remaining sufficiently long in it to establish a modulation. (1877)"

(1877.44) Encycl. Brit. VI. 483/1 "When this [sc. ginning] is done there remains of the bulk, as gathered from the tree, about one-third of clean cotton fit for manufacturing purposes, and two-thirds of seed. The separation of the seed from the lint is accomplished by different methods. (1877)"

(1877.45) Encycl. Brit. VI. 304/2 "The remains of the Seraglio, former palace of the Ottoman sultans. (1877)"

(1877.46) Gray's Anat. (ed. 8) p. cxlvi, "The only remains of the Wolffian body in the complete condition of the female organs are two rudimentary or vestigial structures. (1877)"

(1877.47) In Mem. J. M. Charlton 2 "The shadows of the grave remained undispelled. (1877)"

(1877.49) Man. Field Artillery Exerc. 23 "The right-hand or left-hand man being first placed, the remainder will fall in in line one after the other, closing lightly towards him, turning the elbow slightly outwards. Soldiers must be carefully instructed in the `Touch', as, in this formation, it is the principal guide when marching. (1877)"

(1877.50) H. A. PageDe Quincey II. xix. 166 "Unaltering friendship for him remains as his record in this particular. (1877)"

(1878.35) Sir G. ScottLect. Archit. (1879) II. 141 "In some of the Byzantine remains..they have architecturalised by mouldings and enrichments only just so much of the arch-stones as was needful for beauty, and left the rest to go as mere wall-face. (1878)"

(1878.38) T. HardyRet. Native iv. vii, "The remainders, being cut into lengths and split open, were tossed into the pan. (1878)"

(1878.39) TennysonQ. Mary i. v. 37 "It then remains..to compose the event [Mary's marriage] In some such form as least may harm your Grace. (1878)"

(1878.40) Tyndall in 19th Century Mar. 505 "The substances after having been super-heated remain putrescible, though they do not putrefy. (1878)"

(1878.41) W. H. DallLater Preh. Man 8 "A skeleton interred in the earth, together with the remains of a small iron celt. (1878)"

(1878.42) Amer. Jrnl. Math. I. 152 "As long as the direction of reference remains fixed, the only change that can be made in a system of bipunctual coordinates is an alteration in the position of the initials. (1878)"

(1878.43) Nature 23 May 110/2 "Mr. W. M. Flinders Petrie read a paper on inductive metrology, the purpose of which..is to deduce the units of measure employed by ancient peoples from the dimensions of existing remains. (1878)"

(1878.44) Q. Jrnl. Microsc. Sci. XVIII. 114 "The portion of the spindle which remains in the egg after the formation of the second polar cell reconstitutes itself into a nucleus. (1878)"

(1878.45) tr. Gegenbaur's Comp. Anat. 597 "If the rete remains broken up, then it is known as a diffuse, unipolar, or *monocentric rete mirabile. (1878)"

(1878.46) J. W. Gibbs in Trans. Connecticut Acad. Arts &amp. Sci. 149 "If to any homogeneous mass we suppose an infinitesimal quantity of any substance to be added, the mass remaining homogeneous and its entropy and volume remaining unchanged, the increase of the energy of the mass divided by the quantity of the substance added is the potential of that substance in the mass considered... In the above definition we may evidently substitute for entropy, volume, and energy, respectively, either temperature, volume, and the function &psi.; or entropy, pressure, and the function &chi.; or temperature, pressure, and the function &zeta.. (1878)"

(1878-9.1) W. C. Ayres tr. W. K&uuml.hne in Jrnl. Physiol. I. 115 "We have found it expedient to wash with slightly warmed alcohol, which though it removes a little *Rhodophane, as we may call the third pigment, takes up without failure the last remains of xanthophane. (1878-"

(1879.1) A. J. Hipkins in Grove Dict. Mus. II. 54 "It is..agreed, even by acousticians, that the piano had best remain with thirteen keys in the octave. (1879)"

(1879.11) LubbockAddr. Pol. &amp. Educ. ix. 151 "English travellers in Oriental countries frequently make severe remarks on the manner in which the..remains of antiquity are allowed to go to ruin. (1879)"

(1879.14) Mrs. JamesInd. Househ. Managem. 88 "Kegeree is composed of the remains of cold fish, and is usually a breakfast dish. (1879)"

(1879.15) Miss JacksonShropsh. Word-bk., "Hattocks, sheaves of corn inverted over the `mow' to protect it from wet. The two end sheaves of the `mow', which consists of eight sheaves, are taken as hattocks for the remaining six. (1879)"

(1879.16) Miss JacksonShropsh. Word-bk., "Heel, the top crust of a loaf cut off, or the bottom crust remaining. (1879)"

(1879.17) Miss BirdRocky Mount. I. 245 "One pair of stockings, such a mass of darns that hardly a trace of the original wool remains. (1879)"

(1879.18) ProctorPleas. Ways Sci. v. 125 "The part of the remaining light spectroscopically most effective. (1879)"

(1879.38) Proc. R. Soc. XXVIII. 367 "The calcium line with wave-length 4226..appears more or less expanded with a dark line in the middle..; the remaining bright lines of calcium are also frequently seen in the like condition, but sometimes the dark line appears in the middle of K (the more refrangible of Fraunhofer's lines H), when there is none in the middle of H. (1879)"

(1879.39) Syd. Soc. Lex. "Admotive germination: That in which the episperm containing the end of the cotyledon more or less tumefied remains fixed laterally near the base of the cotyledon. (1879)"

(1879.40) St. George's Hosp. Rep. IX. 742 "The mother had milk-fever and abscess of breast. This last remained uncured. (1879)"

(1879.41) Telegraphic Jrnl. 15 Oct. 344/2 "The `dusting-on' process [of phosphorescent photography] consists in coating a plate with a preparation of dextrine, honey, and bichromate of ammonia which..becomes hardened..remaining tacky where it is protected from..light. (1879)"

(1879.43) tr. De Quatrefages' Hum. Species 4 "In the crystal once formed, the forces remain in a state of stable equilibrium. (1879)"

(1879.44) tr. Haeckel's Evol. Man II. xix. 146 "The brain of the Cloacal Animals has remained at a much lower stage of development. (1879)"

(1880.1) A. R. WallaceIsl. Life 195 "Proofs of a mild Arctic climate, in the abundant *plant-remains of East Siberia and Amurland. (1880)"

(1880.2) A. P. Stanley in Fraser's Mag. May 600 "The Roman Church..remains the great trunk from which the other communions have been divided in Western Christendom. (1880)"

(1880.3) Allman in Linn. Soc. Jrnl., Zool. XV. 136 "These I regard as the remains of the *spermatogenic tissue. (1880)"

(1880.4) Augusta T. DraneSt. Catherine of Siena 369 "During the lifetime of the Saint the stigmas remained invisible, but were not so after her death. (1880)"

(1880.5) A. BrownNew Law Dict. (ed. 2), "Holding over, this is the phrase commonly used to denote that a tenant remains in possession of lands or houses after the determination of his term therein. (1880)"

(1880.6) BastianBrain xxv. 547 "In many cases of Hemi-an&ae.aeig;sthesia, the viscera remain at least as tender as ever under firm pressure. (1880)"

(1880.7) CarnegiePract. Trap., 16 "The dog still remained marking, so I went back. (1880)"

(1880.8) C. R. MarkhamPeruv. Bark 78 "The dead and rotted roots of the rasamala-trees were allowed to remain. (1880)"

(1880.9) CleminshawWurtz' Atom. The. 59 "For the form to remain unchanged in analogous compounds, the elements which replace each other must be mutually isomorphous. (1880)"

(1880.10) DisraeliEndym. III. xv. 153 "The protectionist ministry were to remain in office, and to repeal the corn laws. (1880)"

(1880.11) F. Meyrick in Dict. Chr. Antiq. II. 1140/2 "The Purification... As first instituted, this was not a Festival of St. Mary, but of our Lord; and so it has always remained in the Eastern church. (1880)"

(1880.12) FlowerHist. Trade Tin xiii. 170 "From the palm-oil bath by means of tongs, the sheets are passed by the tinman..to the tin pot, which is full of molten tin, and here they remain to soak for a period of 20 minutes. (1880)"

(1880.21) MuirheadUlpian vi. &sect.5 "An adventicious dowry always remains with the husband, unless the person who gave it have expressly stipulated that it shall be returned to him; such a dowry is called specifically recepticious. (1880)"

(1880.22) McCarthyOwn Times III. 208 "So long as the Bill of 1832 remained *unsupplemented. (1880)"

(1880.23) MuirheadGaius Introd. p. xv, "It is the remains..of a handbook for the practitioner; a vade mecum, as modern law-writers would call it. (1880)"

(1880.28) Saville-KentMan. Infusoria I. 286 "Spongomonas... Animalcules..living in social colonies, and forming by excretion a common domicile, which takes the form of a..gelatinous or semi-granular *zoocytium, within which they remain constantly immersed. (1880)"

(1880.32) Antrim &amp. Down Gloss. s.v., "`The potatoes lie down and walter on the ground', i.e. they remain lying. (1880)"

(1880.33) Athen&ae.aeig;um 25 Sept. 395/1 "The superexaltation of St. Peter in face of the historical evidence which remains as to St. Paul's influence at Rome. (1880)"

(1880.34) Daily News 20 Dec. 5/6 "To those who had already subdivided he offered new mountain farms, leaving the subdividers to decide who should remain and who should remove. (1880)"

(1880.35) Daily Tel. 25 Oct., "The riders remain behind, for the wall from the road is hardly negotiable. (1880)"

(1880.36) Encycl. Brit. XIII. 120/2 "All the Gupta inscriptions are dated in the Gupta-k&aacu.la, the Gupta era, the epoch of which has long been and still remains a subject of dispute. (1880)"

(1880.37) Encycl. Brit. XIII. 341/2 "If cast immediately it is found that a much larger quantity of gas separates during solidification, rendering the steel porous, than is evolved if the metal is dead-melted, i.e., allowed to remain melted for an extra half hour or more. (1880)"

(1880.38) Encycl. Brit. XI. 355/1 "H still remained as the rough breathing. (1880)"

(1880.39) Encycl. Brit. XI. 205/1 "The remainder [of the inhabitants of the Grisons] use the Romansch or the Ladin dialect. (1880)"

(1880.44) Trans. Amer. Inst. Min. Eng. VIII. 417 "Hercules powder..contains a very large proportion of nitrate of soda..the remainder of the dope being incombustible carbonate of magnesia. (1880)"

(1880.45) Mark TwainTramp Abroad xlvii. 495 "The tints remained during several minutes..paling almost away for a moment, then re-flushing,-a shifting, restless, unstable succession of soft opaline gleams. (1880)"

(1881.1) A. J. DuffieldDon Quixote III. lxiv. 641 "He wondered if Rozinante would remain humpbacked or not, or his master dislocated: it had been no small fortune had he been disluned. [Sp. deslocado, f. loco mad, `cracked'.]" (1881)"

(1881.2) A. W. Tourg&eacu.eZouri's Christmas in Royal Gentleman viii. 527 "Then he tried to drain the glass, but a part of the foamy nogg remained in it despite his efforts. (1881)"

(1881.3) Besant &amp. RiceChapl. of Fleet I. 182 "The beadles and vergers curtsied to the quality and remained behind for doles. (1881)"

(1881.4) BehnkeMechanism Hum. Voice (ed. 2) 36 "The remaining two cartilages [of the larynx]..are the Pyramids, so called because of their shape. (1881)"

(1881.5) BlackieLay Serm. ii. 105 "A Samaritan..made it a point..in whatever attitude the first moment of the day had found him, in that position to remain..: if sitting, then to Sabbatise in the sitting attitude. (1881)"

(1881.6) C. C. HarrisonWoman's Handiwork 89 "Modern point coup&eacu...is made on a shut linen foundation, of which some of the threads are cut away and the remainder worked over with buttonhole stitch, making regular square spaces. (1881)"

(1881.8) DuffieldDon Quix. II. 555 "[She] flung her body..across the saddle, and remained forkedly, as if she had been a man. (1881)"

(1881.9) E. Robertson in Encycl. Brit. XIII. 194/1 "That the non-combatant portions of the two communities should remain as though they were in a state of peace. (1881)"

(1881.10) Emma WorboiseSissie xxv, "The pittance that remained was hers-hers unalienably. (1881)"

(1881.11) Flower in Nature No. 619. 437 "When groups of animals become so far differentiated from each other as to represent separate species, they remain isolated. (1881)"

(1881.12) GladstoneSp. in Ho. Comm. 3 Feb., "It becomes my duty to make a Motion for the suspension of the following Members... I have to move that they be severally suspended from the service of the House during the remainder of the day's Sitting. (1881)"

(1881.13) G. AllenColin Clout's Cal. v. (1883) 28 "The remaining ganoids, sharks, and lampreys all show signs of depending mainly upon smell, their modern superseders show signs of depending mainly upon sight. (1881)"

(1881.14) GreenerGun 252 "The pot is then placed in a bright coal fire, where it remains till the whole is of a worm red. (1881)"

(1881.16) GreenerGun 314 "The stoving sweats the powder, and drives off any remaining moisture. (1881)"

(1881.17) JowettThucyd. I. 169 "The invaders remained until their supplies were exhausted. (1881)"

(1881.18) J. L. W. Thudichum in Ann. Chem. Med. II. 18 "A body remained insoluble which was of an alkaloidal nature, and to which, in commemoration of the many enigmas which it presented to the inquirer, I have given the name of Sphingosin. (1881)"

(1881.19) Lincoln tr. Trousseau &amp. Pidoux's Therapeutics (ed. 9) III. 297 "Brown was sometimes right in the pathological order, if the incitation is repeated and remains the same. (1881)"

(1881.20) Lady HerbertEdith 16 "Gordon could not compel her to remain at home and `mope herself to death' as she expressed it. (1881)"

(1881.21) Lankester in Encycl. Brit. XII. 557/1 "In the *Tetragamelian Rhizostom&ae.aeig; these pits remain distinct from one another.., but in the Monogamelian Rhizostom&ae.aeig; they unite to form one continuous sub-genital cavity. (1881)"

(1881.22) MichellHawking in Macm. Mag. XLV. 39 "It remains only to break him to the lure, and to `enter' him, each of which processes is soon completed. (1881)"

(1881.30) TyndallFloating Matter in Air 103 "A shot hare will remain soft and limp for a day. (1881)"

(1881.31) Westcott &amp. HortGrk. N.T. II. 217 "The question of its remoteness or proximateness to the two extant MSS. remains undecided. (1881)"

(1881.32) WentworthAlgebra xix. 266 "The remainder obtained by subtracting the logarithm of a number from 10 is called the cologarithm of the number, or arithmetical complement of the logarithm of the number. (1881)"

(1881.38) Detroit Free Press 26 Sept. 1/5 "Weidman..will have to go into the box for the remaining four games. (1881)"

(1881.39) Eagle Mag. XI. 353 "The remaining two events being run off on the following Tuesday. (1881)"

(1881.40) Encycl. Brit. XII. 832/1 "The Sacs and Foxes, now one tribe, located in Indian Territory, were originally separate, living near Green Bay, Wisconsin... A few still remain in Iowa, Nebraska, and Kansas. (1881)"

(1881.41) Local Govt. Board, Rep. Medical Officer 200 "Pasteur further states that the animals inoculated with the mitigated virus remain immune against further attacks of anthrax. (1881)"

(1881.42) Leicestersh. Gloss., "Flesh-beam or *Fleshing-beam, a wooden instrument..on which is suspended the hide to be dressed, for the purpose of scraping off any remains of the flesh, &amp.c. (1881)"

(1881.43) Nature XXIII. 280 "The peculiar metamorphosis enables the larva to remain..adapted to a locomotor life. (1881)"

(1881.44) Oxfordsh. Gloss. (Suppl.), "Crutlins, the remains of the leaf after the lard is extracted, sometimes called scratchins (Islip cruklins). (1881)"

(1881.45) Proc. Intercollegiate Conventions Conf. in P. H. Davis Football (1911) 469 "If the game still remains a tie the side which makes four or more safeties less than their opponents shall win the game. (1881)"

(1881.46) Pharmaceut. Jrnl. 29 Oct. 358 "Beer..previously `pasteurized'-and exposed to direct sunlight... At the end of three weeks the non-pasteurized beer..commenced to lose its clearness; but the pasteurized sample remained quite bright. (1881)"

(1881.47) Spectator No. 2761. 695 "Millions a year are lost on the Stock Exchange in buying and selling Options alone, just because the keenest of mankind think everything will remain as it was for one more fortnight. (1881)"

(1881.48) Syd. Soc. Lex. s.v. Cartilage, "Cartilage is..permanent when it remains such during life. (1881)"

(1881.49) Times 14 Apr. 10/1 "With extended facilities and provisions for the security of the remainderman, many encumbered Irish properties would now be willingly disposed of. (1881)"

(1881.50) Times 4 Jan. 3/6 "The remainder of the bitumen film is removed and impressions are pulled from it like any other etched plate. (1881)"

(1882.1) A. Thomson in Quain's Elem. Anat. (ed. 9) II. 831 (heading) "Pineal gland. Epiphysis cerebri... This body is formed by an out-folding from the back part of the inter-brain roof, at a place where the opposite sides remain united by nervous matter afterwards giving rise to the pineal peduncles. (1882)"

(1882.3) Cave &amp. Banks tr. Dorner's Chr. Doctrine 220 "The decision of the Dyothelitic Council of the year 680: `The human will remains in unity with the Divine, because it is always determined by the omnipotent drawing of the Logos'. (1882)"

(1882.4) De WindtEquator 34 "The remainder are quartered at the various forts or out-stations along the coast, and in the interior of the country. (1882)"

(1882.5) De WindtEquator 69 "The remainder of the tribe were unarmed, as it is made a strict rule in Sarawak that..all arms..shall be left behind. (1882)"

(1882.6) EverettDeschanel's Nat. Philos. &sect.758 "When this condition is fulfilled, the remaining pair of opposite branches are conjugate, that is to say, a battery in one produces no current in the other. (1882)"

(1882.7) EverettDeschanel's Nat. Philos. &sect.759 "When there is equality between the two products of opposite resistances..the current in either of the two remaining branches will be independent of the electro-motive force of the battery in the other; and these two branches are still said to be conjugate. (1882)"

(1882.10) GeikieText Bk. Geol. iii. ii. ii. &sect.1. 328 "This vapour remains invisible until the air containing it is cooled down below its dew-point, or point of saturation. (1882)"

(1882.11) Galton in Rep. Brit. Assoc. 1881 245 "The Upper Decile is that which is exceeded by one-tenth of an infinitely large group, and which the remaining nine-tenths fall short of. The Lower Decile is the converse of this. (1882)"

(1882.12) Gosse in Grosart Spenser III. p. xlvi, "Ramsay's Gentle Shepherd..remains the most vertebrate and interesting bucolic drama produced in Great Britain. (1882)"

(1882.13) GeikieText-bk. Geol. (1885) 116 "Fragmental rocks are formed either of the d&eacu.bris of older rocks, or of the aggregated remains of plants or animals. (1882)"

(1882.16) J. D. EverettVibratory Motion &amp. Sound v. 51 "Comparing together the four positions of the string..points A, C, and A1 remain permanently at rest, and the points B and D midway between them undergo the largest displacement... The points of permanent rest, A, C, and A1 are called nodes and the points of maximum displacement, B and D, antinodes. (1882)"

(1882.38) Garden 11 Feb. 92/2 "The London Pride remains fresh and bright all through the winter. (1882)"

(1882.39) Harper's Mag. Nov. 872/2 "The grapes for raisin&dubh.making..are removed to an airy building known as a `sweat-house', where they remain possibly a month, till the last vestiges of moisture are extracted. (1882)"

(1882.40) Jamieson's Sc. Dict. IV. 228/1 "To sit on, to remain, to continue to abide in the same house. (1882)"

(1882.42) Pall Mall G. 26 July 6/1 "The whole of the remaining uncalled capital would have to be called up in order to pay the creditors. (1882)"

(1882.43) Syd. Soc. Lex. s.v., "The retina is said to be coarctate when, owing to the accumulation of fluid between it and the choroid, it assumes the form of a funnel, extending from the entrance of the optic nerve to the margin, or to the remains of the lens. (1882)"

(1882.44) Standard 25 Aug. 3/7 "[They] remained on the camp side of the river, escalading, hand grenading, and double lock bridge building. (1882)"

(1882.45) Syd. Soc. Lex., "Cryptorchidism, the condition of a Cryptorchis. Cryptorchis, term for one whose testicles have not descended into the scrotum, but remain in the abdomen. (1882)"

(1882.47) U.S. Rep. Prec. Met. 621 "`Rim-rock' is such portion as remains of the country-rock which formed the sides or banks of the ancient rivers. (1882)"

(1882.48) in West. Morn. News 25 Nov. 5/6 "The ascending cage was hurled into the headgear, smashing the butterflies and breaking the engine rope, and had it not been for the remaining butterflies the cage must have fallen to the bottom. (1882)"

(1883.4) C. S. BurneShropshire Folk-Lore xxi. 277 "The apparitions which..nurses used to discover in their tea-cups when they had..emptied the last remains of the tea in such a manner as to leave the dregs scattered well over the bottom and sides of the cup. (1883)"

(1883.8) FairbairnCity of God iii. i. 230 "The ideal of manhood He [Christ] created..remains the regnant ideal of man, the humanest men being the men who realize it. (1883)"

(1883.9) Goldw. Smith in Ward Eng. Poets II. 381 "Marvell, far less compromised and by no means regicidal, remained in public life. (1883)"

(1883.10) GroveDict. Mus. III. 461/2 "Sempre, `always'; a word used in conjunction with some other mark of time or expression to signify that such mark is to remain in force until a new direction appears. (1883)"

(1883.11) H. W. V. StuartEgypt 425 "A perfect tempest of wind, which..drove the Era against the western bank, where she remained hopelessly pasted. (1883)"

(1883.20) R. HaldaneWorkshop Receipts Ser. ii. 372/2 "The..remaining hairs, and other dirt, can now be very readily scudded out. (1883)"

(1883.21) SeeleyExpans. Eng. 38 "By a colony we understand a community which is not merely derivative, but which remains politically connected in a relation of dependence with the parent community. (1883)"

(1883.22) StevensonBlack Arrow (1888) 52 "The two lads..hurried through the remainder of the outwood. (1883)"

(1883.23) W. A. HammondSexual Impotence in Male i. 57 "The one who was in this disgusting arrangement to act the part of `husband' came to his `wife's' bed and remained there during the night. (1883)"

(1883.24) W. Blake in Walsh Irish Fisheries 27 (Fish. Exhib. Publ.), "Even now in certain parts of the county of Cork there were remains of what were called fish palaces, where the Dutch used to cure the fish. (1883)"

(1883.29) Cambridge Staircase viii. 137, "I am in college, and there I intend to remain till I go down. (1883)"

(1883.30) Chamb. Jrnl. 1 Dec. 761/1 "When the tarantant had by this means recovered, he or she remained free from the disease until the approach of the warm weather in the next year. (1883)"

(1883.31) Cent. Mag. July 332/2 "He shuts off the flow, measures what remains in the tank, and makes out a triplicate certificate, showing depth of oil at the beginning and at the end of the run. (1883)"

(1883.32) Chamb. Jrnl. 78 "The Camorrist remains the personification of power and heroism to the Neapolitan. (1883)"

(1883.33) Cassell's Fam. Mag. Aug. 528/1 "The beans [of coffee are] put through a winnower, which takes off a delicate skin still remaining, called the `silver-skin'. (1883)"

(1883.37) Harper's Mag. Feb. 365/1 "This room remains in its original state, with the exception of the papering. (1883)"

(1883.38) Jrnl. Chem. Soc. XLIV. 230 "The denitrification is effected by the organisms which are developed; for if the liquid is sterilised by heat..the liquid remains clear and the nitrate is not altered. (1883)"

(1883.39) Law Rep. 24 Chanc. Div. 375 "As there were so many shares remaining unallotted, it shews that there were no other persons ready to take them. (1883)"

(1883.40) Syd. Soc. Lex., "Dormant bud, a bud which remains, it may be for years, undeveloped on a plant stem. (1883)"

(1883.41) Science 6 Apr. 252 "The nature of some impressions described by *phytopaleontologists as remains of fossil Alg&ae.aeig;. (1883)"

(1883.42) Times 17 Nov. 10 "The wines should not remain long on ullage. (1883)"

(1883.43) Wharton's Law Lex. (ed. 7), "Intrusion, the entry of a stranger after a particular estate of freehold is determined before him in reversion or remainder. (1883)"

(1883.44) Wharton's Law Lex. (ed. 7) 419 "An insolvent as distinguished from a bankrupt, was an insolvent who was not a trader; for originally only a trader could be made bankrupt, in the sense of obtaining an absolute discharge from his debts, while the future estate of an insolvent remained liable for his debts, even after his discharge. (1883)"

(1883.45) in G. B. Goode Fish Indust. U.S.A. 76 "The fish remained in the basin until they were ripe. (1883)"

(1884.1) McLarenSpinning 46 "[In] the power of remaining fresh and unrancid..olive [oil] is pre-eminent. (1884)"

(1884.2) W. S. B. McLarenSpinning (ed. 2) 62 "As it is to be spun into worsted,..the longer the fibres remain the better will be the spin. (1884)"

(1884.3) A. DaniellPrinc. Physics xi. 247 "If a magnetic needle be so adjusted as to have its lower surface in contact with the surface of a solution of saponine, it will remain in any position in defiance of the directive force of the earth's magnetism. (1884)"

(1884.4) Addis &amp. ArnoldCath. Dict. 553/1 "The name `martyrium' (martu&acu.rion)..at first meant the church built over a martyr's remains. (1884)"

(1884.5) A. BirrellObiter Dicta Ser. i. 183 "The age has remained transitional so unconscionably long. (1884)"

(1884.6) AbbottFlatland i. &sect.1 (ed. 2) 3, "I call our world Flatland..Imagine a vast sheet of paper on which straight Lines, Triangles, Squares, Pentagons, Hexagons, and other figures, instead of remaining fixed in their places, move freely about, on or in the surface, but without the power of rising above it or sinking below it. (1884)"

(1884.10) F. J. BrittenWatch &amp. Clockm. 144 "In this form of the lever escapement the pallets have not less than 10&deg. of motion. Of this amount 2&deg. are used for locking, and the remainder for impulse. The amount of locking is to some extent dependent on the size of the escapement... The lighter the locking the better. (1884)"

(1884.11) Gladstone in Standard 29 Feb. 2/7 "We knew..that the Bill must remain a Bill, and could never have become an Act of Parliament. (1884)"

(1884.12) G. C. DaviesNorfolk Broads xxi. 156 "As we got under the lee of the bridge the wind failed us and we remained motionless in the bridge-way. (1884)"

(1884.14) H. SpencerMan versus State 14 "If people by a pl&eacu.biscite elect a man despot over them, do they remain free because the despotism was of their own making?" (1884)"

(1884.15) JefferiesRed Deer iv. 72 "While this bark or skin remains on the horn the stag is said to be in velvet and is not hunted. (1884)"

(1884.16) J. Payne1001 Nights IX. 166 "Moreover, they ate not anydele of the food that remained in the tray. (1884)"

(1884.17) K. JohnstonAfrica (ed. 3) xxiv. 399 "The remaining portions of Kafraria, including..that of the Amapondo extending across the St. John's River between the Umtata and the Umtamfuna, the boundary river of Natal. (1884)"

(1884.18) KnightDict. Mech. Suppl. 770/1 "If this steel rough be made to fit the hole exactly, it remains firm in its place. (1884)"

(1884.19) Lady Brassey in Gd. Words Mar. 163/1 "We remained hove-to all the next day. (1884)"

(1884.20) L. F. &amp. R. L. AllenNew Amer. Farm Bk. 62 "Spent lye of the asheries, is the liquid which remains after the combination of the lye and grease in manufacturing soap. (1884)"

(1884.21) Madame ValerieCookery for Amateurs ii. 25 "Soups... &Agrave. la Reine. Although this potage has a fine name it is easily made if you have the remains of cold fowl or turkey. (1884)"

(1884.23) R. HollandGloss. Chester 78 "Conquerors, a game played with horse-chestnuts threaded on a string... The chestnut which remains unhurt is then `conqueror of one'. (1884)"

(1884.24) R. W. ChurchBacon iii. 68 "Bacon still remained in the shade. (1884)"

(1884.25) Sir C. S. C. Bowen in Law Rep. 12 Q.B.D. 170 "The blot in the proceedings of the respondent still remains uncured. (1884)"

(1884.26) S. P. ThompsonDynamo-Electr. Machinery vii. 126 "The advantage originally claimed for this construction, namely, that it allows less of the total length of wire to remain `idle' on the inner side of the ring, is rather imaginary than real. (1884)"

(1884.27) Sir J. Bacon in Law Rep. 27 Ch. Div. 47 "The point which is said to remain for disposition when the case is heard. (1884)"

(1884.35) Archit. Publ. Soc. Dict. s.v. M&ae.aeig;ander, "As guillochis or m&eacu.andres are known in Italy as alla Greca, so the word grecque is likely to remain in France the technical name of the m&eacu.andre. (1884)"

(1884.36) Brit. Stand. Handbks. Sports &amp. Pastimes II. ii. 16 "Skittles, That all pins be knocked down, but should one remain standing it shall be considered an extra `go'... That the number of `goes' be limited to five. (1884)"

(1884.37) Cath. Dict. 556/2 "Mary, then, was the Virgin Mother of God. She remained in perpetual virginity. (1884)"

(1884.38) Chesh. Gloss., "Cratcherns or Cratchings, (1) the dried up bits that remain after the rendering of lard, used for making cratchern cakes; (2) graves, from a chandler's refuse fat. (1884)"

(1884.47) Proc. Zool. Soc. 262 "Four specimens of a small Melania were collected..all eroded at the upper part of the spire, leaving only four volutions remaining. (1884)"

(1884.48) Peel City Guardian No. 26. 2/1 "The rest of the `Old Lady in Threadneedle-street' remained unbroken. (1884)"

(1884.49) Times (weekly ed.) 17 Oct. 4/1 "If Parliament is whittled down so that nothing remains of it but the House of Commons. (1884)"

(1884.50) Times (weekly ed.) 5 Sept. 1/1 "The remains of the late Lord Ampthill. (1884)"

(1884.51) York Herald 26 Aug. 7/3 "The trade in wool remains firm..all hog made from 11s. to 12s. 3d. per stone. (1884)"

(1884.52) tr. Lotze's Logic 328 "If this force is of such a kind as to allow the object exposed to its influence to remain identically the same, the same effect would take place afresh in the object every fresh time we let the same cause operate on it. (1884)"

(1884.53) tr. Lotze's Logic 400 "The only remaining possibility is either the lot, or the decision of some external will. (1884)"

(1885.1) C. I. Elton in Encycl. Brit. XVIII. 296/1 "It is said that the only civil function of the parish-clerk now remaining is to undertake the custody of maps and documents..deposited under the provisions of the Railway Clauses Act, 1845. (1885)"

(1885.2) C. T. DavisLeather xlii. 681 "The treatment with the scraping-knife being generally not sufficient for complete frizzing, the remaining portions of the grain are removed with another sharp knife. (1885)"

(1885.3) C. T. DavisManuf. Leather xxxii. 525 "When sufficiently softened the skins are next placed in the `limes'... The goat-skins remain in the `limes' about 14 days. (1885)"

(1885.4) C. T. DavisManuf. Leather xxxii. 527 "Upon removal from the bate the skins are `slated', which is the removal of the fine hair remaining upon the skins after the unhairing operation. (1885)"

(1885.7) J. L. DaviesSoc. Quest. 372 "There must always remain a whole heaven of difference between the position of those who know nothing of nature..and that of those who recognise light and guidance..as coming to men from the living God. (1885)"

(1885.8) J. L. Joynes tr. Marx's Wage-Labour &amp. Capital 10 "The real wage expresses the price of labour in relation to the price of other commodities... Real wages may remain the same, or they may even rise, and yet the relative wages may none the less have fallen. (1885)"

(1885.9) J. Chamberlain in Cobden Club Dinner, Special Rep. 11 "It is only upon those terms that what will be known in history as the `Stop-gap' Government can invite the toleration of its opponents... I see no reason why they should not remain as caretakers on the premises-(great laughter and cheering)-until the new tenants are ready in November for a prolonged..occupation. (1885)"

(1885.10) Mabel CollinsPrettiest Woman v, "There are still the remains of the *serf system. (1885)"

(1885.11) Mrs. H. Ward tr. Amiel's Jrnl. 255 "The glacier throws off the stones and fragments fallen into its crevasses that it may remain pure crystal. (1885)"

(1885.12) ProctorWhist viii. 91 "While doubt remains as to the position of trump strength, avoid..discarding a singleton. (1885)"

(1885.13) T. HardyHuck. Finn viii. 62, "I was having a good enough time seeing them hunt for my remainders. (1885)"

(1885.14) Watson &amp. BurburyMath. Theory Electr. &amp. Magn. I. 83 "The fluid of either kind in any electrified body in excess of that of the opposite kind is called the Free Electricity of the body, and the remaining fluids of the body, consisting of equal amounts of fluids of opposite kinds, together constitute what is called the Latent, Combined or Fixed Electricity of the body. (1885)"

(1885.15) Watson &amp. BurburyMath. Th. Electr. &amp. Magn. I. 234 "The hydrogen H2 does not as in that case remain free. It passes through the diaphragm and displaces an equivalent of copper in the sulphate of copper. (1885)"

(1885.16) Athen&ae.aeig;um 28 Mar. 403/3 "Election..by compromission, wherein certain delegates or proctors, being chosen by the chapter, retired to nominate, the remainder of the chapter continuing in prayer and pledged to accept the nomination of the delegates. (1885)"

(1885.17) Athen&ae.aeig;um 4 July 9/1 "With..increasing injuries to the few remaining defences. (1885)"

(1885.19) Catholic Dict., (ed. 3) s.v., "The Oratory at Birmingham has remained under the direction..of its illustrious founder. (1885)"

(1885.20) Daily News 1 Sept. 2/5 "At half-distance the positions remained unaltered, and, as they began the last lap, it appeared to be any one's race. (1885)"

(1885.21) Encycl. Brit. XIX. 238/2 "French Switzerland has always remained the stronghold of Plymouthism on the Continent. (1885)"

(1885.22) Encycl. Brit. XVIII. 4002 "Histogenetically, they [connective tissues] are the remains of that..embryonic tissue from which the blood-channels themselves were made. (1885)"

(1885.23) Encycl. Brit. XVIII. 486 "They are first defined in an epistle ascribed to Gregory Thaumaturgus about the year 258, and are as under: (1) Weepers..; (2) Hearers..; (3) Kneelers..; (4) Standers, who might remain throughout the entire rite, but were not suffered to communicate. (1885)"

(1885.24) Househ. Words 29 Aug. 350/1, "I say that part of this money shall be shared among us as `sals', and some of the remainder shall be used for mounting the guv'nor's panto. (1885)"

(1885.25) Harper's Mag. Jan. 276/1 "Hides remain in a `first layer' for six or eight days. The same process is repeated in a `second layer' in other vats for about two weeks, and in a third, or `splitting layer', for about four weeks. (1885)"

(1885.38) Syd. Soc. Lex., "Gamogastrous, a term applied to a pistil in which the ovaries are more or less completely united and the respective styles and stigmata remain free. (1885)"

(1885.39) Times 30 July 9/6 "The soaked rice when subjected to steam-heat is liable to form a lumpy porridge instead of a mess in which the grains remain separate. (1885)"

(1885.40) Mrs. AlexanderAt Bay vi, "The picture of the streets through which he was conducted..remained forever stamped upon his memory. (1885)"

(1885.41) Mrs. AlexanderAt Bay ix, "He remained silent for a minute, his hands clasping and unclasping the arms of his chair. (1885)"

(1885.42) tr. P. G. Unna in H. Ziemssen Handbk. Dis. Skin i. 23 "A trace of the horny layer of the first foetal months remains only on the ungual phalanx till a later period, and to this..I have given the name `eponychium'. (1885)"

(1886.2) CrookshankBacteriology 65 "Agar-agar has the advantage of remaining solid up to a temperature of about 45&deg.. (1886)"

(1886.3) C. M. Culver tr. Landolt's Refraction &amp. Accommodation of Eye i. 13 "In order that the homocentric rays may remain homocentric, the surface must have such a form that the angles of incidence shall be everywhere the same. (1886)"

(1886.4) C. S. Minot in Buck's Handbk. Med. Sci. III. 176/1 "The whole of the mesoderm..does not go through this metamorphosis, but..a part remains closely compacted; but ultimately it is only the single layer of cells immediately bounding the c&oe.lom, and the cells constituting the myotomes.., which remain thus close together. These cells, therefore, have all the characteristics of an epithelium, so that the c&oe.lom is limited by an epithelium of cuboidal cells, for which I have proposed the name mesothelium. (1886)"

(1886.8) H. R. Mill in Encycl. Brit. XX. 257/1 "In Hermann's `*hyetometrograph', 1789, a fixed funnel conducts the rain into one of twelve glasses placed on the circumference of a horizontal wheel, which is turned by clockwork, so that each glass remains under the funnel for one hour. (1886)"

(1886.9) J. EdwardsDiff. Calc. i. 4 "If the equation connecting the variables be solved for the dependent variable, that variable is reduced from being an implicit to being an explicit function of the remaining variable or variables. (1886)"

(1886.10) J. M. CaulfeildSeamanship Notes 7 "Reaming a shackle is clearing the undercut portion of the lug of a shackle from any..lead which might remain after pin and pellet are knocked out. (1886)"

(1886.11) J. PulsfordDivine Genius in Nature &amp. Man 27 "The soulish body..begins more rapidly to be purified from all the remains of its fleshly defilement. (1886)"

(1886.12) Ld. Coleridge in Law Times LXXXI. 65/2 "The general costs of the action, which remain after the segregation of these separate costs. (1886)"

(1886.13) Lendenfeld (as above) 562 "*Oxydiact. Four rays rudimentary, only two rays lying in one straight line remain. (1886)"

(1886.14) MorleyGeo. Eliot Crit. Misc. III. 94 "If George Eliot had insisted that her works should remain the only commemoration of her life. (1886)"

(1886.15) R. C. LeslieSea-painter's Log iv. 64 " Well-known sheltered beaches, or `common hards', as they were called. These hards still remain in old seaports. (1886)"

(1886.21) Eng. Hist. Rev. I. 636 "They always remained separate states and were never synoikised. (1886)"

(1886.22) Harper's Mag. July 323/2 "But he (mor'n you and I with all of our might) Could not here always remain. (1886)"

(1886.23) Law Times' Rep. LIII. 664/2 "The permission to remain up during the vacation. (1886)"

(1886.24) Mind XI. 429 "So far the Idea remains contentless. (1886)"

(1886.25) Pall Mall G. 8 Nov. 3/1 "The habit of allowing hay to remain in the fields in `pikes', as they are called in the north,..is one of the customs of the country. (1886)"

(1886.26) Pall Mall G. 18 Feb. 5/1 "There now only remained the geese, far up on the slobby ooze. (1886)"

(1886.27) Pall Mall G. 4 Oct. 6/1 "Clubland proper is still and will remain pretty much what it was in the days of Major Pendennis. (1886)"

(1886.28) Time July (Advt., rear cover), "An indicator which records the hours your day or night watchman remains on duty, and is absolutely tamperproof. (1886)"

(1887.1) A. C. HaddonIntrod. Study Embryol. 100 "The epidermis of Amphioxus permanently remains as a single layer. In all other embryo Vertebrates, the epiblast, from being single, becomes double layered, owing to the primitive epiblast giving rise to a layer of flattened epithelial cells, the epitrichial layer. (1887)"

(1887.4) Ellis &amp. ScruttonCatal. Feb. 5 "It is conclusively shewn that the text is quite perfect, and that the eighth leaf of Sig. G. was a blank, of which there is still the stump remaining in this copy. (1887)"

(1887.14) M. ShearmanAthletics &amp. Football v. 143 "T. G. Little and J. H. T. Roupell..tied at 5ft. 9in., a height which remained the `record' for the next five years. (1887)"

(1887.15) Rolleston &amp. JacksonForms Anim. Life 331 "The nematocysts are removed from the cells or cnidoblasts in which they were developed, and where they usually remain until discharged. (1887)"

(1887.16) Sylvester in Amer. Jrnl. Math. IX. 20 "Instead of the cumbrous terms Projective Reciprocants or Differential Invariants, it is better to use the single word Principiants to denominate that crowning class or order of Reciprocants which remain to a factor pr&egrave.s, unaltered for any homographic substitutions impressed on the variables. (1887)"

(1887.23) Courier-Jrnl. (Louisville, Kentucky) 6 Feb. 2/2 "A steering committee upon the order of business for the remainder of the session was appointed. (1887)"

(1887.24) Courier-Journal (Louisville, Kentucky) 12 Jan. 6/3 "All that remained for the brakemen and switchmen to do was to go to the office..and call for what is known in railroad parlance as their `time'. (1887)"

(1887.25) Daily News 21 July 2/4 "Fanfare remained a staunch favourite to the end. He, however, ran very unkindly. (1887)"

(1888.11) DuffPol. Surv. 5 "As long as France remained a first-rate power. (1888)"

(1888.12) Earll in Goode Amer. Fishes 342 "The pasture school remained within a few miles of a large school of sperling without being drawn after them. (1888)"

(1888.13) F. Pollock in Encycl. Brit. XXIII. 454 "In the 16th century, a special form of `trespass on the case' became, under the name of assumpsit, the common and normal method of enforcing contracts not made by deed, and remained so till the middle of the present century. (1888)"

(1888.17) J. Wright tr. Brugmann's Elem. Compar. Gram. Indo-Europ. Lang. I. 501 "Owing to the scantiness of the Umbrian-Samnitic materials, handed down to us, it remains doubtful at what period certain processes of sandhi took place in Latin. (1888)"

(1888.18) Rolleston &amp. JacksonAnim. Life 93 "The remaining portion of the embryonic hyoidan cartilage gives origin to the interhyal or stylohyal [etc.]. (1888)"

(1888.19) R. M. JohnstonSyst. Acct. Geol. Tasmania 337 (Morris), "With the exception of their rude inconspicuous flints, and the accumulated remains of their feasts in the `mirnyongs', or native shell-mounds, along our coasts,..we have no other visible evidence of their former existence. (1888)"

(1888.20) Rolleston &amp. JacksonAnim. Life 147 "The larva..has a somewhat vermiform appearance owing to the great homonomy or similarity of the remaining somites. (1888)"

(1888.21) Rolleston &amp. JacksonAnim. Life 492 (Arthropoda) "The hypodermic cells beneath the thickened cuticle constitute the ommateum, and remain either in a single or form a double layer; hence mono- or diplo-stichous. The monostichous ommateum is said to be apostatic when cup-shaped. (1888)"

(1888.22) Rolleston &amp. JacksonAnim. Life 491 "A head region..either remains distinct..or becomes continuous with a part or whole of the thorax, forming a cephalo-thorax... A thorax is not marked off in the Myriapoda. (1888)"

(1888.23) Rolleston &amp. JacksonAnim. Life 781 (Hydrozoa Acraspeda) "Four of them, the perradial tentacles,..correspond to the four angles of the mouth; four others, the interradial tentacles, second in development, to the centres of the square sides of the mouth, and the remaining eight adradial tentacles occupy the intervals between the per- and interradial. (1888)"

(1888.24) Rolleston &amp. JacksonAnim. Life 861 "The longer process is vibratile and breaks away; the other becomes vibratile as soon as it has absorbed the remaining protoplasm. (1888)"

(1888.28) W. C. UnwinTesting of Materials of Construction i. 18 "When a body is subjected to the action of external forces, it undergoes a deformation which is either a deformation which disappears if the load is removed (elastic deformation), or a deformation which remains after the load is removed (plastic deformation). (1888)"

(1888.29) Athen&ae.aeig;um 22 Dec. 850/2 "His main dealings before this having been in `remainders', and his one solitary publication a failure. (1888)"

(1888.31) Blackw. Mag. 396 "Nothing remained but to declare the `trig' field season at an end. (1888)"

(1888.32) Contemp. Rev. Apr. 544 "The large number of Christians who professed Islam, but remained *crypto-Christians. (1888)"

(1888.33) Daily News 9 July 5/7 "Whilst he was suffocating he remained calm and still. (1888)"

(1888.34) Encycl. Brit. XXIV. 602/2 "The smell common to all wines (which remains in an empty wine cask after the bloom proper has gone). (1888)"

(1888.35) Encycl. Brit. XXIV. 605/2 "Sauterne..possessing a special s&egrave.ve, or, in other words, having that special taste which, while it remains in the mouth, leaves the palate perfectly fresh. (1888)"

(1888.36) Encycl. Brit. XXIV. 409/1 "The remaining or permanent hardness consists of sulphate of lime and other soluble salts. (1888)"

(1888.37) Encycl. Brit. XXIII. 264/2 "Biblical theology is the delineation of a section of religious ideas,-that section of which the traces and records remain in the Bible. (1888)"

(1888.38) Lockwood's Dict. Terms Mech. Engin., "Permanent set, that amount of deflection from which a beam or structure is unable to return to its original form, but which remains constant. (1888)"

(1888.39) Law Times LXXXIV. 293/2 "There remained the point, which was the crux of the case, whether the defendant was under any duty towards the plaintiff. (1888)"

(1888.40) Nature 14 June 156/2 "In the Metazoa, the germ&dubh.cells, instead of remaining single, give rise to the vast number of somatic cells which compose the adult structure. (1888)"

(1888.41) N. &amp. Q. 7th Ser. V. 344 "All that remains of the west sides of the square..is continued on the same plan as the brick house, and dresses with it in height. (1888)"

(1888.42) Pall Mall G. 12 Sept. 2/2 "During the three days that we spent under his roof I remained unbathed. (1888)"

(1888.43) Times 31 Aug. 3/1 "The question of sovereignty remained unprejudged. (1888)"

(1888.44) Times 5 Sept. 5/1 "All the remaining C&ae.aeig;sarians and Plebiscitarians had enrolled themselves under a new leader. (1888)"

(1889.1) A. J. Hipkins in Grove Dict. Mus. IV. 189/2 "The old way of tuning pianos by the Tuning Hammer (or a *Tuning Lever) remains in vogue. (1889)"

(1889.2) Bennett &amp. MurrayCryptog. Bot. 266 "It [the zygosperm] then remains dormant through the winter as a resting cell or *hypnosperm, germinating in the spring. (1889)"

(1889.3) BarrieWindow in Thrums 173 "The few shillings..remained unfingered. (1889)"

(1889.4) ChrystalAlgebra, "If m be any positive integer whatever, which we call the modulus, two integers, M and N, which leave the same remainder when divided by m, are said to be congruent with respect to the modulus m. (1889)"

(1889.5) ElvinDict. Heraldry, s.v. "Marshalling, a *Grand Quartering..usually accompanies the assumption of a second name, and unites the two associated coats so inseparably, that if they come to be Marshalled with other quarterings they are no longer (as in other cases) spread out among them, but they still remain together as a Grand Quartering. (1889)"

(1889.6) H. Zwaardemaker in Lancet 29 June 1301/1, "I have lately constructed a small instrument which, I think, deserves the name of `olfactometer'. Its component parts consist of two tubes fitting into each other. The outer one is lined with scented material, and made to glide up and down over the inner one, of which one end remains free and is bent to fit the nostril. (1889)"

(1889.7) Lipscomb in Land Agent's Record 6 Apr. 316 "In parishes where the great or rectorial tithes remain devoted to the Church, we find a rector and a rectory. (1889)"

(1889.8) Mrs. E. KennardLanding a Prize vii, "Perhaps it was just as well..that Ebenezer remained in his cabin. (1889)"

(1889.10) W. S. GilbertGondoliers ii. 32 "As at home we've been remaining-We've not seen you both for ages. (1889)"

(1889.11) 19th Cent. Nov. 758 "The hopes that the few remaining hundreds of the aborigines might be captured in one sweep. (1889)"

(1889.12) 19th Cent. Nov. 755 "Though we had three deaths during the passage, as we also had three births, our tally remained correct. (1889)"

(1889.13) Athen&ae.aeig;um 14 Sept. 351/1 "The persistence with which Mrs. Markenfeld..remains en pension in a gloomy house with such abominable company. (1889)"

(1889.14) Anthony's Photogr. Bull. II. 315 "In order to obtain true orthochromatism it is always necessary..to interpose a transparent yellow screen somewhere between the object and the plate in order to cut off a certain proportion of the blue and violet rays, to which the plates still remain relatively too sensitive. (1889)"

(1889.18) Cent. Dict. s.v. Canon (1) , "Enigmatical canon,..riddle canon, in old music, a canon in which one part was written out in full and the number of parts was given; the remaining parts were to be written out by the student in accordance with the requirements of an enigmatical inscription written upon the music. (1889)"

(1889.20) Infantry Drill 271 "The reliefs are kept separated a few yards from the remainder of the piquet, to avoid disturbing them. (1889)"

(1889.21) N.W. Linc. Gloss., "*Steddle-burnt, said of the seat of a hay&dubh.cock which has remained so long covered that the grass has dried or become bleached. (1889)"

(1889.22) Pall Mall G. 21 Jan., "It is not considered [by the authoress] of any importance if the word sen&tilde.or remains without its tilde. (1889)"

(1889.23) Schoolmaster 4 May 634/1 "In place of the familiar initials, N.U.E.T. we have the shorter, and let us hope the improved, form of *N.U.T... The objects of the N.U.E.T. remain the objects of the N.U.T. (1889)"

(1889.24) Times 17 Jan. 9/4 "The British plantations would have remained..as slumberous as they have been in the past. (1889)"

(1890.2) B. H. ChamberlainThings Japanese 221 "The conduct of the affair must be entrusted to a middleman (nako&mac.do)-some discreet married friend, who not only negotiates the marriage, but remains through life a sort of godfather to the young couple. (1890)"

(1890.6) W. JamesPrinc. Psychol. I. xiii. 549 "The Fechnerian Maasformel and the conception of it as an ultimate `psychophysic law' will remain an `idol of the den', if ever there was one. (1890)"

(1890.7) W. JamesPrinc. Psychol. I. ii. 44 "According to Loeb, the defect is a dimness of vision (`*hemiamblyopia') in which (however severe) the centres remain the best seeing portions of the retina. (1890)"

(1890.8) Webster, "*Dutch door, a door divided into two parts, horizontally, so arranged that the lower part can be shut and fastened, while the upper part remains open. (1890)"

(1890.9) W. J. GordonFoundry 26 "The gun would remain in sight only long enough to fire. The enemy at sea would sweep the chalk hill in vain for a sign of its presence other than the smoke. (1890)"

(1890.10) Athen&ae.aeig;um 1 Mar. 278/3 "There remains a large collection of memoirs on general botany and *phyto-biology. (1890)"

(1890.11) Century Mag. 51/2 "The remainder of the plumage being penciled, or marked transversely, with narrow black lines at right angles to the shaft of the feather. (1890)"

(1890.12) Coach Builders' Jrnl. XI. 181 "The remaining exhibit..by this firm was a specimen of their famous Ralli Car with basket body. (1890)"

(1890.14) Field 6 Sept. 393 "At the top of the hill we cast off our leader, the remaining four go in their collars and up to their bits. (1890)"

(1890.15) Jrnl. Chem. Soc. LVII. 499 "The parenchymatous tissue of the endosperm portions..is completely disintegrated, the cell-walls either entirely disappearing or remaining in a much swollen and altered form as mere `ghosts'. (1890)"

(1890.16) Proc. Sci. Meetings Zool. Soc. 70 "Xenopus is a most admirable swimmer, and remarkable for the manner in which it remains poised for a long time immediately under the surface of the water. (1890)"

(1890.22) Whitaker's Almanack 346/2 "The French Chamber..decided to transfer the remains of Carnot, Marceau, and Baudin to the Pantheon. (1890)"

(1890.23) Berkeley&Eacu.cart&eacu. &amp. Euchre 28 "French &Eacu.cart&eacu.. When several persons desire to join in a game of &Eacu.cart&eacu., it is generally arranged in the following manner. Two of the number sit down to play a game in the usual way,..and the remainder, called `The Gallery', are allowed to take part in the game to the extent of betting on the player of their choice, and advising him, if necessary. (1890)"

(1891.1) C. R. DayMusic &amp. Mus. Instruments S. India vii. 103 "The vina, the tamburi or tamburu-vina, and the kinneri still remain just as they are described in the ancient books. (1891)"

(1891.11) KiplingLight that Failed xiv, "Bessie remained in his arms shrinking. (1891)"

(1891.12) Mrs. L. B. WalfordMischief of Monica xxix, "They have got into the Schofield swim, and in the Schofield swim they must remain. (1891)"

(1891.13) Murray &amp. RenardRep. Deep-Sea Deposits iii. 185 "From the point of view of their composition, as well as of their geographical and bathymetrical position, Marine Deposits may be separated into two great divisions, viz. (I.) Pelagic Deposits-those formed towards the centres of the great oceans, and made up chiefly of the remains of pelagic organisms along with the ultimate products arising from the decomposition of rocks and minerals; and (II.) Terrigenous Deposits. (1891)"

(1891.14) R. WallaceRural Econ. Austral. &amp. N.Z. i. 30 "Sometimes the [potato] sets remain fresh and do not decay in the soil after the haulms have developed; they remain `staggy' or hard and woody. (1891)"

(1891.15) R. WallaceRural Econ. Austral. &amp. N.Z. xv. 232 "When the burning is badly done the seed cannot be properly sown; the rubbish lies thick over the ground and the whole has to be gone over again and `logged-up', else the land is thrown temporarily out of use..while the owner waits for the remaining rubbish to decay. (1891)"

(1891.16) S. M. WelchRecoll. Buffalo 1830-40 353 "The workmen were to receive..only half cash, the remainder in trade-store pay, i.e.: in orders on the employers or other stores for such goods as they needed. (1891)"

(1891.22) Daily News 6 Nov. 2/6 "The latter did not long remain pointless, and after a long run by Hubbard, Fegan registered a try. (1891)"

(1891.23) Hartland Gloss 73 "Spur road, a bridle path. Now obsolete in this sense, although the word remains in the name of a bye-road. (1891)"

(1891.24) Jrnl. Chem. Soc. LX. 1151 "Autocatalysis... The presence of a salt of the acid, for instance the sodium salt, in the solution, retards the formation of the lactone very considerably, and the amount of free acid in the solution, as determined alkalimetrically, remains constant for days together. (1891)"

(1891.25) Labour Commission Gloss., "Plus System, also called `bonus' system, is one by which a certain proportion of wages, called `subsistence money', is paid every day, and the remainder on the completion of the job or contract. This remainder is called the plus, or `contingent money'. (1891)"

(1891.26) Law Times XCI. 3/2 "Although the deed purported to bar the remainders over, its legal effect was to pass merely a base fee. (1891)"

(1891.27) Law Times XC. 409/1 "The whole of those sums remained due. (1891)"

(1891.28) Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia 208 "Dr. Harrison Allen spoke of the disposition occasionally exhibited in adult mammals, for the proportions of different parts of the body to remain as they were in the immature individuals... Dr. Allen proposed for this peculiarity the term pedomorphism. (1891)"

(1891.30) Weekly Notes 200/1 "The tenant for life..could over&dubh.ride the sentimental interests of the remaindermen. (1891)"

(1891.31) L. HoffmannCycl. Card &amp. Table Games 203 "Each person puts up an agreed amount by way of ante... To avoid dispute as to whose turn it may be, a pocket-knife, known as the `buck', is passed round, resting with the player whose turn it is to `chip' for the remainder. (1891)"

(1892.1) Bp. Westcott in Daily News 16 March 5/7 "The coal remains there to this day unwon. (1892)"

(1892.2) C. BoothPauperism ii. iv. 60 "The father of the movement in favour of old-age pensions is Canon Blackley. With him must always remain the credit of whatever good may finally come out of any of these proposals. (1892)"

(1892.3) E. ReevesHomeward Bound 334 "She had come over to Paris to lift his remains and remove them to another place. (1892)"

(1892.30) Pall Mall G. 28 July 3/3 "You are..`all even' so far, and only one more hole remains to be played after this. Should you lose this one, your antagonist will be `dormy', that is to say, he will be one hole up with one to play; so that, although you may yet halve the match, you will not be able to win it. (1892)"

(1892.31) Pall Mall G. 19 Jan. 4/3 "He remained three hours in the water, afraid to move, lest he should get out of his depth. (1892)"

(1893.3) A. S. EcclesSciatica 3 "In the remaining nine cases there was more or less ballooning of the rectum. (1893)"

(1893.4) C. A. White in Rep. U.S. Nat. Museum 1892 264 "There are seven different natural conditions in which fossil remains are recognizable, three of which relate to substance, three to form, and one to both. To those relating to substance I have applied the terms permineralization, histometabasis, and carbonization... The term permineralization applies to that condition of fossil remains of animals which differ least from their original condition as parts of living animals. (1893)"

(1893.5) D. G. Brinton in Smithsonian Rep. 594 "The constant blending of extreme physical types which the somatologist discovers in the remains from the oldest cemeteries around that great interior sea. (1893)"

(1893.7) GladstoneSp. Ho. Com. 13 Feb., "I want to know..who will be the effective guarantor that this remainder will not also vanish?" (1893)"

(1893.8) HodgesElem. Photogr. 132 "The clear portions of the negatives should remain unclouded and free from veil or fog until the last. (1893)"

(1893.9) H. JoyceHist. Post Office vi. 44 "Out of London, the Post Office servants remained [in 1690] much as they had been ten years before, at about 239 in number, of whom all but twelve were postmasters. (1893)"

(1893.10) NewtonDict. Birds, "Hawk, a word of indefinite meaning, being often used to signify all diurnal Birds-of-Prey which are neither Vultures nor Eagles, and again more exclusively for those of the remainder which are not Buzzards, Falcons, Harriers or Kites. (1893)"

(1893.11) R. W. Shufeldt in Pop. Sci. Monthly XLII. 679 "Pal&ae.aeig;opathology..is a term here proposed under which may be described all diseased or pathological conditions found fossilized in the remains of extinct or fossil animals. (1893)"

(1893.12) Stevenson in Daily News 11 Apr. 6/3 "Of the remaining three-fourth parts of my said father's estate, one-fourth part of the three-fourth parts I give and bequeath [etc.]. (1893)"

(1893.14) Sir R. BallStory of Sun 290 "It [carbon] will stubbornly remain solid even though exalted to an enormously high temperature. (1893)"

(1893.15) T. CookMission Tour 25 "The men sign articles to remain in these compounds for a certain period, usually six months, and are not allowed to leave for any cause until the time has expired. (1893)"

(1893.17) Burke's Peerage 1481 "He was advanced to a viscounty 1885, with remainder, in default of his male issue, to his daughter with remainder to her male issue. (1893)"

(1893.18) Cassell's Bk. Sports &amp. Pastimes 255 "The players [at Duckstone] then, standing at home, `pink for duck', that is, they throw their stones towards the block, and he whose stone remains farthest from the block is first duck. (1893)"

(1893.27) Northumbld. Gloss. s.v., "The term hoastman has long ceased to describe the profession of coal-shipper or `engrosser' of the commodities enumerated in the charter of incorporation..The Company of Hoastmen remains simply the premier Incorporated Company of Newcastle, and election to its membership is a much coveted honour. (1893)"

(1893.28) Outing XXII. 88/2 "But, though he had several strikes, his stringer remained dry in his pocket. (1893)"

(1893.29) Pall Mall G. 23 Jan. 2/1 "Although it has suffered somewhat from repaint..it still remains one of the most beautiful single heads produced by Renaissance painting. (1893)"

(1893.30) Q. Jrnl. Geol. Soc. XLIX. 77 "We have, therefore, sunken massifs both west and east of the D&uuml.rrenstein; that mountain itself remains at a higher level between the two, and may be called a `Horst' in the sense originally applied by Suess. (1893)"

(1893.31) Scot. Leader 15 Aug. 7 "These vessels..differ from the ordinary trawlers in respect that while the latter return to port at least once a week, the fleeters remain at sea as long as their coals hold out. (1893)"

(1893.32) Times 1 June 9/5 "Cutting short the discussion on..the remaining clauses of the Bill by what is known as the `guillotining' process. (1893)"

(1893.33) Times 14 July 9/5 "The gagging resolution excluded all debate on the remaining clauses. (1893)"

(1894.1) A. RobertsonNuggets 4 "He dashed into the catching pen, and seized the smaller of two sheep that remained. (1894)"

(1894.2) A. T. SnellElectr. Motive Power iv. 126 "The *line loss remains constant when the percentage of the line drop is kept the same for variations of supply pressure. (1894)"

(1894.3) Baring-GouldDeserts S. France I. 149 "Their remains may be discovered at a lower level, though not subterposed. (1894)"

(1894.4) C. F. MitchellBuilding Construction iii. 132 "Racking is the term applied to the method of arranging the edge of a brick wall, part of which is unavoidably delayed while the remainder is carried up. (1894)"

(1894.6) DoyleMem. S. Holmes 109 "We had the drags at once, and set to work to recover the remains. (1894)"

(1894.7) E. Eggleston in Century Mag. Apr. 850 "Our country people, when speaking of the male flower of the maize, preserve the broad vowel of their ancestors: `tossell' it will remain in spite of the schoolmaster. (1894)"

(1894.8) F. W. Oliver tr. Kerner's Nat. Hist. Plants I. 154 "It is not surprising to find Drosophyllum covered at the same time with remains of besmeared dead bodies. (1894)"

(1894.9) G. Dunn in Classical Rev. Mar. 95/1 "The problem remains to determine whether there are any Phonemes which may be regarded as the representatives of these hypothetical and analogically deduced long sonants. (1894)"

(1894.10) Hall CaineManxman 419 "The spendthrift had..sold up the remainder of his furniture. (1894)"

(1894.11) H. PaaschFrom Keel to Truck (ed. 2) 463/1 "Stiffening, is the term given to any weighty substances taken on board a vessel for the purpose of making her `Stiff', i.e. less crank. Stiffening (whether consisting of ballast or a portion of the outward cargo) is put in vessels which do not remain upright without having sufficient weight in the bottom. (1894)"

(1894.12) H. SpeightNidderdale 380 "Remains of this old thoroughfare..in the shape of large pave-stones. (1894)"

(1894.13) H. Spencer in Westm. Gaz. 29 Aug. 8/2 "The stronger peoples have been land-thieves from the beginning, and have remained land-thieves down to the present hour. (1894)"

(1894.14) J. GeikieGt. Ice Age (ed. 3) 30 "The beds of snow..being usually marked off by a `*dirt-line' or crust formed of a mixture of dust, small grit, and occasional remains of insects. (1894)"

(1894.16) K. Pearson in Phil. Trans. R. Soc. A. CLXXXV. 72 "A frequency-curve, which, for practical purposes, can be represented by the error curve, will for the remainder of this paper be termed a normal curve. (1894)"

(1894.17) K. HedgesAmer. Electr. Street Railways vii. 75 "In the case of the G.E. 800 type when the side suspension is used, the whole of the weight is taken off the axle, whereas by the older method half the weight only was on the cross bar, resting on springs, and the remainder on the axle. One method is known as the End or *Nose Suspension, the other as the Side Bar Suspension. (1894)"

(1894.18) MaskelyneSharps &amp. Flats 140 "To allow a certain number of cards to remain undisturbed is a comparatively simple matter in any shuffle. (1894)"

(1894.19) SteadIf Christ came to Chicago 295 "*Fire-Marshal Swenie has remained in command of the firemen for many years. (1894)"

(1894.20) T. W. FoxMechanism of Weaving ii. 17 "It will be noticed that the threads from shaft 4 are reeded two in a dent, and those from the remaining shafts three in a dent. (1894)"

(1894.22) W. J. LinehamTextbk. Mech. Engin. x. 699 "The first practical gas engine..was double-acting, charging with air and gas during a half stroke, firing during the remaining half. (1894)"

(1894.23) Amer. Dict. Printing 149/1 "Drop letters, two-line letters, the top being as high as the top of a line of an advertisement or of reading matter, the remainder dropping down to the next line. This expression is not used in America, the equivalent being a two-line letter. (1894)"

(1894.24) Daily News 26 July 3/3 "He won the race so easily that little notice need be taken of the placings of the remainder of the field. (1894)"

(1894.25) Nation (N.Y.) 31 May 405/1 "What actually remains in situ is the walls of the foundations. (1894)"

(1894.26) Outing 453/2, "I led him alongside, where-as a played-out 'longe always will-he remained motionless..for a few seconds. (1894)"

(1894.27) Westm. Mag. 8 May 2/3 "The mere show, the social functioning and ceremony, remains, although everyone knows that the life of the metropolis no longer expresses itself through the City Corporation. (1894)"

(1894.29) Westm. Gaz. 2 May 2/3 "The state of things described by Kingsley still remains in the lower strata of these sweated industries. (1894)"

(1894.30) Westm. Gaz. 2 Feb. 3/1 "The five or six little skunklets remain en famille with their parents until the following spring. (1894)"

(1894.31) Mark Twain in Century Mag. Apr. 822 "Tom's conduct had remained letter-perfect during two whole months. (1894)"

(1895.1) A. Forbes in Daily News 18 Feb. 6/3 "Mr. Herbert, in his redoubt in the centre of the Grivitza heights, remained unengaged until 4 p.m. (1895)"

(1895.2) C. H. Merriam in U.S. Dept. Agric., N. Amer. Fauna No. 8. 112 "The tuza series [of Geomys] inhabits the South Atlantic and Gulf States south of the Savannah River and east of the Mississippi... The members of the tuza series agree among themselves and differ from the remaining forms of the genus Geomys in having longer and more naked tails, and in numerous cranial characters. (1895)"

(1895.4) J. LewkowitschChem. Analysis Oils, Fats, Waxes iv. 100 "The temperature will continue to fall, but then it will rise suddenly..and reach a maximum, remaining thereat stationary for some little time before it falls again. This point is called the titer or solidifying point. (1895)"

(1895.5) Ld. Watson in Law Times Rep. LXXIII. 37/1 "They have sold their patent..for..30,000l., and..allowing a reasonable deduction for those items which they have disbursed, there still remains to the good a very considerable sum of money. (1895)"

(1895.6) Ld. C. E. PagetAutobiog. iv. (1896) 80 "Finding the ship hard and fast, he had nothing for it but to remain quietly on board. (1895)"

(1895.8) MansonSporting Dict. 58 (Faro), "Hock or Hockelty card, the last card remaining in the box, after the deal has been made. (1895)"

(1895.9) Pollock &amp. MaitlandHist. Eng. Law I. 198 "This `final concord' or `fine', will be drawn up by the royal clerks and one copy of it, the so-called `Foot of the Fine', will remain with the Court. (1895)"

(1895.11) RashdallUniversities 790 "The jurisdiction of the Court of the High Steward of the University [of Oxford]..remains intact, but the privilege has never been claimed for a century or more. (1895)"

(1895.14) W. J. Corbett in Soc. Eng. v. (1902) II. 140 "As the tone of society became gentler, the lords naturally had a tendency to free their serfs;..in the eyes of the law the villeins remained serfs. (1895)"

(1895.15) 19th Cent. July 152 "English law still remains..conspicuous for its defects of form,..and no one would pretend that the art of `nomography' is not capable of further material development. (1895)"

(1895.16) Amer. Jrnl. Psychol. VII. 78 "Experimental Psychology was in its origin, and has remained for a considerable extent in its development, a German science. (1895)"

(1895.17) Athen&ae.aeig;um 14 Dec. 839/1 "Many of them [megalithic remains] are marked with scribings and other ornamentations. (1895)"

(1895.18) Century Mag. May 155/2 "Only a few, a very few, of the faithful old `maumers' and loyal house- and body-servants remain. (1895)"

(1895.23) Thompson St. Poker Club 65 "The Rev. Mr. Smith dealt Mr. Williams two cards,..helped himself to the last ten-spot remaining in the pack. (1895)"

(1896.1) AllbuttSyst. Med. I. 564 "The animal remains passive while the immunity-conferring substances are applied to its tissues. (1896)"

(1896.2) A. J. HipkinsPianoforte 44 "Setting the military bands aside as forming a province ruled by its own law, the French pitch yet remains as appertaining to preference and not obligation. (1896)"

(1896.3) E. B. WilsonCell ix. 305 "Mitotic division is conceived [by Weismann] as an apparatus which may distribute the elements of the chromatin to the daughter nuclei either equally or unequally. In the former case (`hom&oe.okinesis', integral or quantitative division), the resulting nuclei remain precisely equivalent. (1896)"

(1896.4) E. B. WilsonCell ii. 53 "There are..some undoubted cases..in which the centrosome remains undivided during the resting stage and only divides as the process of mitosis begins. (1896)"

(1896.5) J. WeltonMan. Logic (ed. 2) I. iii. iii. 251 "Obversion is a change in the quality of a predication made of any given subject, whilst the import of the judgment remains unchanged. The original proposition is called the Obvertend, and that which is inferred from it is termed the Obverse. (1896)"

(1896.7) R. W. PaulBrit. Pat. 4686, "I prefer to employ the following mechanism,..causing the film to be propelled instantaneously a small amount, after which it remains still for projection of the picture. (1896)"

(1896.12) Daily News 3 Nov. 2/3 "The supplies remaining over from the expedition, and consisting chiefly of large quantities of provisions, vegetables, staminal foods, and pemmicans, will be sold..on Monday. (1896)"

(1896.13) Daily News 21 Nov. 8/2 "His medical attendant..remained with the prisoner-patient throughout a considerable part of the night. (1896)"

(1896.14) Engineering News XXXVI. 27/1 "When a long stub-end track gets full of empties, the cars at the stub end are likely to remain for weeks and months. (1896)"

(1896.15) J. Lillard's Poker Stories 246 "But one single dollar remained of that five spot. (1896)"

(1896.16) Living Topics Cycl. (N.Y.) II. 260, "5 [rifled guns] were well advanced, and the parts for the remainder were nearly all forged and some of them machined. (1896)"

(1896.17) Pop. Sci. Monthly Feb. 494 "As long as it remains a stranger and an unlike. (1896)"

(1896.18) Times 18 Dec. 13/5 "The action was to recover..in respect of sidage or standage charged upon trucks..which remained more than four days upon..sidings. (1896)"

(1896.19) Times 18 Dec. 13/5 "The action was..in respect of sidage or standage rent charged upon trucks..which remained more than four days upon their sidings. (1896)"

(1897.1) C. T. DavisManuf. Leather (ed. 2) xxiv. 382 "The hides are next suspended in `rockers'... They remain in the `rockers' from seven to ten days. (1897)"

(1897.2) AllbuttSyst. Med. III. 71 "The generalisation of an infective disease which in most instances remains localised may be due..to the dissemination of the specific organism. (1897)"

(1897.3) AllbuttSyst. Med. III. 117 "When the hyperostoses are large they remain in a modified form. (1897)"

(1897.4) A. H. MilesConcise Knowl. Astron. ii. xv. 195 "In the guiding telescope are two spider threads at right angles to each other, and it is by constantly keeping the image of a star at the intersection of these `wires' that the operator ensures the images remaining in a constant position upon the sensitive plate. (1897)"

(1897.5) B. RussellEssay on Foundations of Geometry i. 24 "As regards independence of rotation in rigid bodies (Monodromy). If (n&min.1) points of a body remain fixed, so that every other point can only describe a certain curve, then that curve is closed. (1897)"

(1897.6) B. StokerDracula xxvii. 381 "There remain one more victim in the Vampire fold; one more to swell the grim and grisly ranks of the Un-dead. (1897)"

(1897.7) FosterCompl. Hoyle 299 (Cinch), "He may search the remainder of the pack, and take from it any cards that he pleases. This is called robbing the deck. (1897)"

(1897.9) J. M. SarbahFanti Customary Laws 3 "The words `Akan' (Akanfu) arose probably from the way the Mfantsifu referred to those who remained at Takieman. The word Akan to our mind means a remnant. (1897)"

(1897.10) Mary KinglseyW. Africa 488 "Between five and six weeks..the widow remains in the hut, armed with a good stout stick, as a precaution against the ghost of her husband. (1897)"

(1897.11) M. DziewickiWyclif's De Logica (1899) III. Introd. 26 "Christ's Body..is present without either position or shape. The bread is not annihilated; what remains is a purely mathematical body, but not nothing. (1897)"

(1897.12) M. DziewickiWyclif's De Logica iii. (1899) p. xviii, "If every punctal atom is and remains eternally the same, then the elements would remain in their compounds. (1897)"

(1897.13) Marquis of Salisbury in Times 16 Feb. 8/1 "The concerted sympathy of the Powers remains complete. (1897)"

(1897.14) Mary KingsleyW. Africa 176 "The Adoomas left and fled to the French authority at Njole and remained under its guarding shadow until the French came up and chastised the Fans. (1897)"

(1897.15) MatherRuskin (ed. 5) p. xvii, "Even though the truth burdening the style remains vague and is ungrasped by the reader. (1897)"

(1897.18) Parker &amp. HaswellText-bk. Zool. II. 562 "In the Mole and the Bandicoot not only is there no decidua thrown off, but the f&oe.tal placenta with the distal portion of the allantois does not pass out after the f&oe.tus, but remains, and is broken up or absorbed in the uterus. Such a condition has been termed contra-deciduate. (1897)"

(1897.19) R. H. StoryApostolic Ministry Scot. Church v. 154 "The beehive cells, the remains of which may still be seen in Eilean Naomh and other Hebridean isles. (1897)"

(1897.20) W. JamesLet. 28 Apr. (1920) II. 58 "Life and mysticism exceed the articulable, and if there is a One..it must remain only mystically expressed. (1897)"

(1898.3) C. S. PeirceColl. Papers (1934) V. 412 "Science, when it comes to understand itself, regards facts as merely the vehicle of eternal truth, while for Practice they remain the obstacles which it has to turn, the enemy of which it is determined to get the better. (1898)"

(1898.4) G. W. E. RussellCollect. &amp. Recoll. ii. 14 "In those untender days he was considered too delicate to remain at a Public School. (1898)"

(1898.5) H. C. Porter tr. Strasburger's Text-bk. Bot. ii. i. 313 "Both valves are so strongly impregnated with silica, that, even when subjected to intense heat, they remain as a siliceous skeleton, retaining the original form and markings of the cell walls. (1898)"

(1898.6) HamblenGen. Manager's Story xiv. 234 "The awkward attempts of the new men to get the few remaining dead engines watered and fired-up. (1898)"

(1898.7) J. M. Lightwood in Encycl. Laws Eng. X. 237 "In possession: as applied to an estate or interest, these words usually mean that the right is immediate, and not in reversion, remainder, or expectancy. (1898)"

(1898.8) J. R. IllingworthDivine Immanence iii. 71 "It remains then that we..conceive of God as at once transcending and immanent in nature. (1898)"

(1898.10) 19th Ann. Rep. U.S. Geol. Survey vi contd. 29 "Usually the terms `production' and `pipe-line runs' are considered as synonymous, but production is always slightly in excess of runs. The expression `pipe-line runs' means the amount of oil the pipe lines have received from the wells, and as the pipe lines do not run all the oil in the tanks at the wells, it would be remarkable if the same amount remained in the tanks at the wells at the close of each year. (1898)"

(1898.11) Allbutt's Syst. Med. 1024 "In the remainder there was no valve-lesion. (1898)"

(1898.12) Daily News 22 Sept. 4/5 "Against the renunciation of `irredeemed' territory (to use the Italian term) must be set the implied guarantee of the remainder. (1898)"

(1898.13) Daily News 9 May 2/3 "In the open, bar gold remained in strong demand for America at about 77s. 934d. per ounce. (1898)"

(1899.4) H. W. DresserVoices of Freedom ii. 22 "The term `New Thought', now the accepted appellation of a doctrine which has differentiated itself from..mental science..and become the representative teaching of those who..are not worshippers of personality, are not bound to certain books, but remain independent. (1899)"

(1899.12) Amer. Anthropologist Oct. 601 "*Property marks are used very frequently by the Eskimo tribes of Alaska. They occur almost exclusively on weapons used in hunting, which, after being dispatched, remain in the bodies of large game. (1899)"

(1899.13) Allbutt's Syst. Med. VI. 753 "All that remains in man of the great rhinencephalon of macrosmatic mammals is the olfactory bulb and tract. (1899)"

(1899.14) Allbutt's Syst. Med. VII. 591 "Nothing now remained but to press the use of anti-pneumococcic serum. (1899)"

(1899.15) Allbutt's Syst. Med. VI. 829 "There is no mental stimulus to the combination of the retinal images, and the eyes remain in their static or resting position. (1899)"

(1899.17) Daily News 10 Apr. 8/2 "The ceratodus, a fish with lungs, which, though its fossil remains are scattered over the world, is now confined to two rivers in the south of Queensland, the Mary and the Burnett. (1899)"

(1899.18) Daily News 30 Sept. 6/1 "Night by night he remained at the office till the last, seeing the paper to bed (to use the old-fashioned phrase), and examining the first copies printed. (1899)"

(1899.21) N. &amp. Q. 9th Ser. III. 365/2 "Quills as pens remained in use in some houses as the only writing tool up to a dozen to twenty years ago... Nowadays..the word `pen' has almost dropped out of usage, except to express the pen and holder. (1899)"

(1899.22) Proc. Zool. Soc. 919 "There is one detached tooth remaining, which is of the same Squalodont type. (1899)"

(1899.27) Mark TwainMan that corrupted Hadleyburg in Harper's Mag. Dec. 30/2 "A remark which he made to me has remained with me to this day, and has at last conquered me. (1899)"

(1900.1) AdeMore Fables (1902) 106 "When all the Smart Set get ready to pike away for the Heated Term..she would remain at Home. (1900)"

(1900.2) A. DunnBridge 54 "He should take the first opportunity of echoing in a plain suit, which will inform the leader that he has still one trump remaining. (1900)"

(1900.3) C. E. McClung in Kansas Univ. Q. A. IX. 78 "The term `chromosome' being..restricted to the units of the division figures, there remains no name for the parts composing these when they are compound, as in tetrads and diads... I should like, therefore, to propose the term `chromatid' for each of these. (1900)"

(1900.4) D. StoneOutl. Chr. Dogma xi. 191 "Receptionism is the view that the bread and wine remain only bread and wine after consecration; but that, together with them, the faithful communicant really receives the body and blood of Christ. (1900)"

(1900.5) E. B. WilsonCell (ed. 2) i. 52 "Eisen ('97) asserts that in the blood of a salamander..the attraction-sphere..containing the centrosomes may separate from the remainder of the cell (nucleated red corpuscles) to form an independent form of blood&dubh.corpuscle or `plasmocyte', which leads an active life in the blood. (1900)"

(1900.6) Gildemeister &amp. HoffmannVolatile Oils 558 "The remaining part of the oil [of Ajowan], about one half, consists of hydrocarbons, which are sold in commerce under the name of thymene..a mixture of cymene and a terpene boiling at 172&deg.. (1900)"

(1900.7) J. M. BaconBy Land &amp. Sky i. 12 "The balloon on rising fouled a big elm, and for a moment remained caught high up among the boughs. Then it tore off a large branch entangled in the rigging. (1900)"

(1900.8) Ld. Kelvin in Phil. Mag. L. 306 "For atoms of electricity, which, following Larmor, I at present call electrons, it inevitably occurs to suggest a special class of atoms... A positive electron would be an atom which by attraction condenses ether into the space occupied by its volume; and a negative electron would be an atom which, by repulsion, rarefies the ether remaining in the space occupied by its volume. (1900)"

(1900.10) R. HutchisonFood 263 "The remaining sugars of this group are malt-sugar, or maltose, and milk-sugar, or lactose. (1900)"

(1900.11) W. T. BranntIndia Rubber, Gutta-Percha &amp. Balata iii. 111 "If the articles are allowed to remain too long in the solution, over-vulcanization may take place, that is, the surface of the article becomes hard and brittle. (1900)"

(1900.17) Daily News 20 Sept. 5/3 "It is needless for me to say that a number of these [removals] remain untraced. (1900)"

(1900.18) Engineering Mag. XIX. 752/1 "This substance, which has received the name of pearlite, is an intimate mixture of thin lamell&ae.aeig; of ferrite and yet thinner lamell&ae.aeig; of a chemical combination of iron and carbon, Fe3 C, which bears the name of cementite. Low-carbon irons and steels are composed of a conglomeration of ferrite and pearlite, but when the carbon reaches about 0&rdot.8 per cent. the ferrite granules disappear, and only the pearlite remains. (1900)"

(1900.19) Jrnl. Anthropol. Inst. XXX. 47, "I have not much to say about the remains of the `strand loopers' or `shore walkers', as they have been called, from their habit of life. (1900)"

(1900.20) Jrnl. Franklin Inst. CXLIX. 291 "The leading makers now photometer each and every lamp, and the practice of photometering a few and picking out the remainder by the eye is past. (1900)"

(1900.21) Jrnl. Yorkshire Ramblers' Club I. 134 "The temptation to remain above ground certainly was very strong, and some of the pot-holers gazed rather wistfully after the men who, at the parting of the ways, left them for Ingleborough. (1900)"

(1900.22) Law Rep., App. Cases 405 "The net remains fixed for periods as long as six hours at a stretch. (1900)"

(1900.24) Phil. Trans. R. Soc. B. CXCII. 342 "There remains the assumption that vertebr&ae.aeig; have been excalated in front of the pelvis. (1900)"

(1900.25) Phil. Mag. XLIX. 114 "In the case of a gas, of which the statistics are assumed to be regular, the potential energy remains approximately constant. (1900)"

(1900.26) Speaker 19 May 190/2 "The population of the lyc&eacu.es and colleges has remained stationary. (1900)"

(1900.27) Yearbk. U.S. Dept. Agric. 94 "After the figs were dried they were placed in sweat boxes holding about 200 pounds each, where they were allowed to remain for two weeks, to pass through a sweat. (1900)"

(1900.28) tr. Deniker's Races of Man v. 148 "*Endocannibalism is but the remains of a natural state of primitive man. (1900)"

(1901.1) D. CockerellBookbinding ix. 131 "If the book has been trimmed, or is to remain uncut, a little more must be allowed for the `squares'. (1901)"

(1901.2) F. G. BenedictChem. Lect. Exper. 3 "The Kipp generator, or one of its various modifications, remains today the only portable gas generator for the lecture table... The simpler and less expensive the form of Kipp used, the better. (1901)"

(1901.3) H. MorrisSurg. Dis. Kidney &amp. Ureter II. xxiv. 81 "A calculus either may remain fixed in the kidney substance or in a calyx, or may occupy the renal pelvis, within which it can move about, or it may migrate along the ureter towards the bladder. In either of the latter conditions it will probably give rise to renal colic. (1901)"

(1901.4) J. E. H. ThomsonRecent Comm. Daniel 12 "There are remains of eastern forms..for instance, the use of the lamed as preformative for the yod in the Substantive Verb-a Mandaean i.e. eastern usage. (1901)"

(1901.5) J. McTaggartStud. Hegelian Cosmol. ix. 277 "But I mean that the characteristic which experience possesses of being not-self-its `not-selfness', if the barbarism is permissible,-will always remain as an external and alien element. (1901)"

(1901.6) J. A. GodfreyScience of Sex 256 "So long as the sheath remains whole, it is an absolute preventative. (1901)"

(1901.7) M. FranklinMy Brilliant Career xxiv. 207 "The recent `going bung' of a building society-his sole remaining prop-had run him entirely ashore. (1901)"

(1901.8) Merwin &amp. WebsterCalumet `K' i. 15 "All that remained was to wait until the business agent made the next move. (1901)"

(1901.9) TitchenerExper. Psychol. I. i. 19 "The contrast disc, with an extra 30&deg. of white or black in its ring, is set up before its appropriate background. The contrast colour is matched upon the second mixer as before. Note that the same grey background must be retained for the second mixer, in order that the contrast relations may remain the same on both discs. (1901)"

(1901.10) W. RidgewayEarly Age Greece I. ii. 237 "After the Terramare came the Early Iron Age, usually termed the Villanova period by the Italian archaeologists, from the discovery of a large number of its characteristic remains at Villanova near Bologna. (1901)"

(1901.11) W. D. HowellsHeroines of Fiction I. 12 "They imagined the heroine who was after all a Nice Girl; who still remains the ideal of our fiction. (1901)"

(1901.12) Ann. &amp. Mag. Nat. Hist. VII. 315 "Those [animals] remaining in the old place formed a zonally-disposed relict-fauna. (1901)"

(1901.13) Business Terms &amp. Phrases (ed. 2) 199 "Stale cheque,..a cheque which has remained unpaid for some considerable time. (1901)"

(1901.14) Chambers's Jrnl. May 302/2 "Each leaf will give on an average two `wrappers' or outside covers for cigars and when used for such the remainder of the leaf is used for `filling'. (1901)"

(1901.15) Chambers's Jrnl. 4 May 366/2 "The prefix `minus' attached to a primary colour..[implies] that this particular colour is cut out of the spectrum of white light, and that the negatively-named compound is a blend of the hues remaining. `White minus red', `white minus green', and `white minus blue' would be the complete expressions; they are ordinarily termed complementary colours. (1901)"

(1901.16) Daily News 5 Jan. 6/5 "The junction for the Aldershot branch..is being..rearranged on the `fly-over' system, that is, the down line..remains as it was, but a new one..is being brought over the top of the main line by means of a skew bridge... This `fly-over'..will abolish a fruitful source of delay. (1901)"

(1901.17) Daily Colonist (Victoria, B.C.) 20 Oct. 10/3 "So long as..there is no means of obtaining..official reports,..so long will mining stock investment remain on the level of `nickel-in-the-slot' gambling. (1901)"

(1901.18) Daily Chron. 16 Apr. 3/2 "The remainder of the staff, consisting of the jailer, the under&dubh.jailer, the warrant-sergeant, and various warrant officers, are all policemen, selected for their duties by the police authorities. (1901)"

(1901.19) Field 19 Oct. 606/2 "What remains of impracticable Utopism that may cling to this new project. (1901)"

(1901.20) Pall Mall G. 27 May 5/3 "The thylacine is confined to Tasmania, although its fossil remains have been found in New South Wales. (1901)"

(1901.21) Rep. Philippine Comm. III. 405 "In order to state very briefly how the remaining Philippine languages or dialects are related we select from among them some of the principal ones... These are the Ibanag and Ilocano, of North Luzon. (1901)"

(1901.22) Rep. Brit. Assoc. 791 "Very complete remains of baths were found, with two brick-built hypocausts and a stokery. (1901)"

(1902.2) F. T. Bidlake in Cycl. Tour. Cl. Gaz. Aug. 360/1 "Any further brake pressure put on by the lever will remain locked on by the twisting handle. (1902)"

(1902.3) H. J. L. BeadnellPrel. Note Arsinoitherium Zitteli 3 "Discovery of Eocene mammalian and reptilian remains made last year by the Geological Survey of Egypt... The most important of these is a large, heavily built, ungulate, about the size of a rhinoceros, and for which the writer proposes the generic name Arsinoitherium, from Queen Arsinoe, after whom the Fayum was called in Ptolemic times. (1902)"

(1902.4) Hillebrand &amp. Penfield in Amer. Jrnl. Sci. CLXIV. 217 "The alkalies and lead play so small a r&ocirc.le, and the remaining constituents so prominent a part in the complex chemical molecules, that the latter control or dominate the crystallization by virtue of what may be called their mass-effect. (1902)"

(1902.5) H. J. White in J. Hastings Dict. Bible IV. 880/2 "The various Hentenian editions remained for some years as the standard text of the Roman Church, but were still private publications. (1902)"

(1902.7) Ld. AveburyScenery Eng. ix. 303 "The loop often remains as a dead river-channel or `Mortlake'. Such loop-lakes are known in America by the special name of `Ox&dubh.bows'. (1902)"

(1902.8) Ld. Rosebery in Times 21 Feb. 6/1 "Speaking pontifically within his `tabernacle' last night, he [Sir H. C.-B.] anathematised my declarations on the `clean slate' and Home Rule... I remain, therefore, outside his tabernacle, but not, I think, in solitude. (1902)"

(1902.9) L. H. BaileyCycl. Amer. Hort. IV. 1622/2 "Scallion, a name for the Shallot; also used for onions that do not make good bulbs but remain with thick necks. (1902)"

(1902.10) T. M. LindsayCh. &amp. Min. in Early Cent. vi. 254 "After the celebration the faithful, who all remained in the church, came forward to the `Table'. (1902)"

(1902.11) Vaughan &amp. NovyCellular Toxins (ed. 4) vii. 144 "The blood of animals in which one ureter has remained tied for some time becomes laden with a *nephrotoxic substance. (1902)"

(1902.12) W. Bateson et al. Rep. Evolution Comm. R. Soc. I. 23 "Among the large number of capsules examined, there were some of the mosaic type, in which part of the capsule was prickly and the remainder smooth. (1902)"

(1902.13) W. D. HowellsLiterature &amp. Life 49 "A few houses of the past remain, but the type of the summer cottage has impressed itself upon all the later building, and the native is passing architecturally, if not personally, into abeyance. (1902)"

(1902.14) Cyclists' Touring Club Gaz. Aug. 359/1 "A spicule of flint..pierced my tube, but kindly remained in evidence as a locater. (1902)"

(1902.18) Encycl. Brit. XXVI. 460/1 "If the matador remains without moving, or rather moving only his body to avoid the stroke of the horns, the thrust is known as recibiendo. (1902)"

(1902.19) Encycl. Brit. XXXI. 55/2 "In certain localities, for instance, Cyprus, Crete, and most of the Aegean islands,..Mycenaean remains..form in fact a stratum to be expected on the site of almost every ancient Aegean settlement. (1902)"

(1902.20) Encycl. Brit. XXVIII. 567/2 "In the case of crystalline fusion it is necessary to distinguish two cases, the Homogeneous and the Heterogeneous... In the second case, the solid and liquid phases differ in composition; that of the liquid phase changes continuously, and the temperature does not remain constant during the fusion. (1902)"

(1902.21) Encycl. Brit. XXXII. 65/2 "This connection of vegetal and animal functions remains one of the obscurest in all psycho-biology. (1902)"

(1902.24) Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. III. 142 "Hilbert states..that his body of axioms consists of independent axioms, that is, that no one of the axioms is logically deducible from the remaining axioms. (1902)"

(1902.25) Westm. Gaz. 26 Mar. 2/1 "Others cannot remain in an atmosphere that is not constantly replenished with fresh oxygen; they stifle. (1902)"

(1902.26) Westm. Gaz. 26 Feb. 6/3 "Dr. Heber Hart..is convinced that the principles of the League can be effectively advocated only by those who remain within the tabernacle of the party, whoever may be the Chief Rabbi for the time being. (1902)"

(1902.27) Westm. Gaz. 18 Dec. 12/2 "In Norfolk it is customary to speak of attending a funeral as `following' the remains. (1902)"

(1903.2) B. RussellPrinc. Math. ii. 32 "It remains a question for *philosophical logic whether there is not a quite different notion of the disjunction of individuals. (1903)"

(1903.3) B. RussellPrinc. of Math. I. iv. 45 "We shall say that `Socrates is human' is a proposition having only one term; of the remaining components of the proposition, one is the verb, the other is a predicate... Predicates..are concepts, other than verbs, which occur in propositions having only one term or subject. (1903)"

(1903.4) L. M. E. SolonOld Eng. Porcelain, 220 "This evergreen `bone china' has remained unaltered ever since the first pieces of it came out of Spode's oven. (1903)"

(1903.5) Prince &amp. Speck in Amer. Anthropologist V. 195 "Their language, of course, remained Pequot, a dialect which shows a..striking kinship..with the present speech of the Canadian Abenakis. (1903)"

(1903.6) Rutherford &amp. Soddy in Phil Mag. V. 586 "At each stage [of disintegration] one or more &alpha. `rays' are projected, until the last stages are reached, when the &beta. `ray' or electron is expelled. It seems advisable to possess a special name for these now numerous atom-fragments, or new atoms, which result from the original atom after the ray has been expelled, and which remain in existence only a limited time... We would..suggest the term metabolon for this purpose. (1903)"

(1903.7) Sir M. G. GerardLeaves fr. Diaries viii. 250 "Allowing time for the surround to be accomplished, he then strolled off with the remaining..sepoys. (1903)"

(1903.8) W. J. HollandMoth Bk. 323 "The larv&ae.aeig;, which are commonly known as `measuring-worms', `span-worms', or `loopers', have the power in many cases of attaching themselves by the posterior claspers to the stems and branches of plants, and extending the remainder of the body outwardly at an angle. (1903)"

(1903.9) Ann. Reg. 1902 272 "The Government remained in the hands of the bloc; and the Radical-Socialist party was free to proceed with the enforcement of the law with regard to the Congregations. (1903)"

(1903.10) Amer. Chem. Jrnl. Mar. 188 "The solution was kept cooled to 15&deg.. One cc. was removed at intervals (5 cc. in all), and the `immediate' titer was found to gradually decrease from its original value of 6&rdot.4 to 1&rdot.2 in about one-half hour, the total active oxygen content..remaining the same. (1903)"

(1903.11) Century Mag. Apr. 819/1 "General Grant..declined to remain in town for the occasion, saying that he had had enough of `show business'. (1903)"

(1903.12) Daily Chron. 6 Nov. 5/1 "Thanksgiving Day long remained an institution peculiar to New England, but it has been observed annually in New York State since 1817. (1903)"

(1903.15) Jrnl. Chem. Soc. LXXXIV. ii. 555 "R&ouml.merite was prepared by allowing a mixture of powdered ferrous sulphate and acid ferric sulphate to remain in contact with moist air for several months. (1903)"

(1903.19) Phil. Trans. R. Soc. 21 "If an organ has been modified only by indirect selection, then its partial regression coefficients on any complex of other organs, however large or small, provided it includes all the directly selected organs, will remain unchanged by the selection. (1903)"

(1904.3) A. StrahanGeol. S. Wales Coalfield V. i. 3 "Nearly all the remainder of the Old Red [Sandstone] tract is occupied by the red sandstones of the Brownstone division, but a thick and persistent group of sandstones and marls with cornstones, generally characterised by a green colour, appears in some of the deeper valleys, among others that of the Senni, from which fact the name of Senni Beds has been applied to them. (1904)"

(1904.4) ChestertonNap. Notting Hill iii. ii. 151 "One of those queer little shops..which must be called toy-shops only because toys..predominate; for the remainder of goods seem to consist of almost everything else in the world-tobacco, exercise-books,..halfpenny paper clips. (1904)"

(1904.5) C. G. ChildBeowulf p. v, "Great indeed would have been our loss, if..the only remaining *folk-epic of the Germanic peoples, had perished in doing menial service to grocer or soap-seller. (1904)"

(1904.6) Goodchild &amp. TweneyTechnol. &amp. Sci. Dict. 212/1 "In gas and oil engines the exhaust gases consist of the products of combustion, together with any unburnt gases remaining after the explosion. (1904)"

(1904.7) H. H. Wilder in Amer. Jrnl. Anat. III. 389 "Corresponding to this hypothesis..we may designate these two types [of twin] respectively as Fraternal and Duplicate, thus doing away with the misleading and inapplicable terms `identical' and `homologous' as applied to the one type, and furnishing a distinguishing term for the other, which seems thus far to have remained without a name. (1904)"

(1904.8) H. G. WellsFood of Gods i. iv. 92 "The two surviving hens..spent their remaining years in eggless celebrity. (1904)"

(1904.11) J. ChamberlainSpeech 19 Jan. (Oxf. Dict. Quots., ed. 2), "Provided that the City of London remains as it is at present, the clearing-house of the world. (1904)"

(1904.12) Ld. RoseberySp. at Glasgow 5 Dec., "In the history of every puntsman there comes a critical moment..when he has to make a decisive choice whether he will go overboard with the pole, or whether he will remain in the punt without the pole. (1904)"

(1904.13) L. W. FoxDis. Eye xii. 311 "The special difficulties..in removing a cataract before maturity are that parts of the cortex, clear at the time of operation, will remain adherent to the capsule of the lens, and later undergo the process of opacification... Some operators, however, operate on immature cataracts, washing out the tenacious material with a syringe. (1904)"

(1904.14) M. B. Field in M. Maclean Mod. Electr. Pract. II. i. vi. 28 "If one of the phases of a &232.-connected system is disconnected, the remaining two can still supply a three-phase current, but with a diminished efficiency. (1904)"

(1904.17) T. Johnstone tr. Kraebelin's Lect. Clin. Psychiatry iii. 25 "All his movements showed a certain constraint and want of freedom. His limbs remained for some time in the position in which you placed them. If you raised your arms quickly in front of him, he imitated the movement, and he also clapped his hands when it was done before him. These phenomena, called respectively flexibilitas cerea, `waxen flexibility', or catalepsy and echopraxis, are familiar to us from experiments in hypnotism. (1904)"

(1904.19) W. OslerAequanimitas v. 82 "His son..held the chair for nearly the same length of time, and the remainder of the period has been covered by the occupancy of John Goodsir, and his successor..the present incumbent. (1904)"

(1904.20) Astrophysical Jrnl. XIX. 118 "The appearance and disappearance, according to circumstances, of the satellite lines still remains a most curious fact. (1904)"

(1904.21) Daily News 22 Oct. 12 "As the men were engaged in `ripping top' they came across what is believed to be the fossilised remains of a large fish. (1904)"

(1904.22) Electr. World &amp. Engineer 27 Feb. 396/2 "The four batteries of boilers constituting each section of the boiler plant are interconnected by a 10-in. main and a 4-in. auxiliary line, both in the form of a ring main... With the location of the valves adopted in the event of rupture of any section of a ring main the trouble may be localised by shutting off the disabled section, the remaining half of the main being kept in service. (1904)"

(1904.23) Electrician 13 May 139/2 "If the field winding on one of the limbs of a Manchester-type dynamo is open-circuited, this limb will magnetically short-circuit the remaining limb. (1904)"

(1904.24) Heffer &amp. Sons' Catal. 2 "As the History of `Remaindered' Books would almost prove, it might be said that no Book was really great until it had been `Remaindered'. (1904)"

(1904.25) Jewish Encycl. VII. 368/1 "The stability and the immutability of the Law remained from the Orthodox standpoint one of the cardinal principles of Judaism. (1904)"

(1905.5) E. C. EckelCements 185 "Grappier cements are made by grinding finely the lumps of unburned and overburned material which remain when a hydraulic lime is slaked. (1905)"

(1905.6) F. E. ClementsRes. Methods Ecol. iv. 238 "It is seldom..that the facies and invaders are so equally matched in height and other qualities that they remain in equilibrium. (1905)"

(1905.7) G. K. ChestertonR. Browning v. 115 "Prejudice is not so much the great intellectual sin as a thing which, we may call, to coin a word, `postjudice', not the bias before the fair trial, but the bias that remains after. (1905)"

(1905.8) H. De VriesSpecies &amp. Varieties 201 "Of two hundred seeds one became a blue atavist, or rather vicinist, while all others remained true to the white type. (1905)"

(1905.9) J. C. WilsonTraversing Geometr. Figures i. &sect.1. 5 "To traverse in a figure, or in a part of it, is to trace a path along its lines, no line being traced twice over, ending at a point at which no path in the figure, or the given part of it, remains untraced. (1905)"

(1905.10) W. H. HowellText-bk. Physiol. ii. 60 "The discoverer of nucleon has attributed to it a very great physiological importance, as a source of energy to the muscle, and as an efficient means of transportation of iron, calcium, [etc.]... It must be stated, however, that there still remains some doubt as to the chemical individuality of the nucleon or the nucleons. (1905)"

(1905.11) Act 5 Edw. VII c. 13 &sect.3 "The Secretary of State may..make an order (in this Act referred to as an expulsion order) requiring an alien to leave the United Kingdom within a time fixed by the order, and thereafter to remain out of the United Kingdom. (1905)"

(1905.13) Edin. Rev. July 197 "Evident from the very plentifulness of these remains. (1905)"

(1905.14) Jrnl. Physiol. XXXII. 329 "A portion of the globulin solution was dialysed... The euglobulin which fell out was removed... The fluid remaining after dialysis contained the *pseudo&dubh.globulin. (1905)"

(1906.1) B. Webb in S. Hynes Edwardian Turn of Mind (1968) iv. 114 "Friendship between particular men and women..is practically impossible..without physical intimacy... There remains the question whether, with all the perturbation caused by such intimacies, you would have any brain left to think with? " (1906)"

(1906.2) Chamberlin &amp. SalisburyGeol. II. 484 "While perhaps they should remain under the broad mantle of the term Chordata, they must apparently be removed from the true vertebrates to a new class. (1906)"

(1906.3) C. P. GilmanWomen &amp. Economics (ed. 5) iii. 49 "So utterly has the status of woman been accepted as a sexual one that it has remained for the woman's movement of the nineteenth century to devote much contention to the claim that women are persons! " (1906)"

(1906.4) GalsworthyMan of Property i. iii. 44 "Between the points of his stand-up collar,..the pale flesh of his *underchin remained immovable. (1906)"

(1906.5) H. GreenAt Actors' Boarding House 61 "Sammy explained that..the remainder had dwindled rapidly, what with treating the gang and being a right guy generally. (1906)"

(1906.7) L. ClaremontGem-Cutter's Craft 100 "The heavy material among which are the diamonds..is..passed through a machine called the `greaser', which consists of a shaking table made of five shallow steps..coated with a thick layer of grease, and the diamonds adhere to the grease while the remainder of the gravel is washed away. (1906)"

(1906.8) T. SintonPoetry of Badenoch 21 "Presenting him with the milk-cog, she assured him that so long as a stave of it remained [etc.]. (1906)"

(1906.10) W. Johannsen in Rep. Third Internat. Conference Genetics 98 "It remains quite uncertain whether the numbers..contain a multitude, or a few, or only one single `sort' of organism-`biotypes' as I have called them. (1906)"

(1906.11) Athen&ae.aeig;um 20 Jan. 70/3 "The Wire-workers, who were closely associated, if not indeed identical, with the Plate-workers, appear to have remained..a branch of the Girdlers' Company at least as late as..1685. (1906)"

(1906.12) Athen&ae.aeig;um 10 Mar. 304/2 "Mr. W. P. Pycraft read a paper on the `Tracheophone Passeres', which he described as a group differing from all the remaining Passeres in the formation of the syrinx. (1906)"

(1906.13) Bio-chem. Jrnl. I. 494 "In all my experiments with charcoal some trypsin has remained merely adsorbed, and therefore transferable to added casein and active. (1906)"

(1906.15) Bio-Chem. Jrnl. II. 22 "Case XV, also not *lipaemic, was allowed a fat-rich diet, but five days later the lipaemic condition was absent, and has remained so. (1906)"

(1906.16) Cambr. Nat. Hist. I. 96 (Sporozoa) "Some of the cytoplasm of the original cells remains over unused, as `epiplasm', and ultimately degenerates. (1906)"

(1906.17) Daily Tel. 23 Aug. 9/7 "He limped out to bat, after remaining in obscurity as a crocked player for half a day. (1906)"

(1906.18) Philippine Jrnl. Sci. I. 583 "The length of time during which the virus may remain viable in the soil and in stables is not determined. (1906)"

(1906.19) Practitioner Dec. 772 "The patient, if the monopolar bath had to be administered, grasped a metal bar, suspended from the ceiling, and in connection with the battery swung over the bath, the other electrode remaining in the water. (1906)"

(1906.20) Times 17 Nov. 9/3 "How many books do we see every year produced by publishers who..`remainder' them at a few pence a copy? " (1906)"

(1906.21) Westm. Gaz. 18 Apr. 2/1 "Others of us who have felt..an inexplicable horror of remaining within four walls..now know that we are sufferers from Claustrophobia. (1906)"

(1907.2) G. BaconRecord of Aeronaut xiv. 255 "Aeronautical experts..advised..that, as the balloon might have to remain inflated for a long while before starting, one of large size should be employed, and a `solid' or `ripping' valve substituted for the usual `Butterfly' variety. (1907)"

(1907.3) G. S. GordonLet. 9 Sept. (1943) 23, "I have called you sweet girl. But I will not..retract; and so sweet girl you must remain william nilliam. (1907)"

(1907.5) J. R. Angell in Psychol. Rev. XIV. 62 "The most lucid exposition of the structuralist position still remains, so far as I know, Titchener's paper, `The Postulates of a Structural Psychology'. (1907)"

(1907.7) W. JamesPragmatism v. 182 "At this stage of philosophy all non-European men without exception have remained. (1907)"

(1907.8) Chem. Abstr. I. 2206 " The solid constituents remain as separate as in mixtures such as sand, clay, and lime, the *electrosmotic components separating readily while the non-electrosmotic components remain in the liquid. (1907)"

(1907.9) Athen&ae.aeig;um 31 Aug. 242/1 "The theory of mutation..assumes that a species has its birth, its lifetime, and its death, even as an individual, and that throughout its life it remains one and the same. By a mutation it does not change itself, but simply produces a new type. The mutation `is allied to its ancestor as a branch is to a tree'. (1907)"

(1907.10) Athen&ae.aeig;um 22 June 764/2 "For seventeen years the pup&ae.aeig; of this species [of locust] remain underneath the ground... This long subterranean vigil is not necessarily one of usual pupal inaction. (1907)"

(1907.11) Amer. Jrnl. Sci. CLXXIV. 470 "At the present time there are remaining only few traces of these old bolson surfaces. Most of these remnants have been preserved only on account of being covered by extensive lava sheets. (1907)"

(1907.12) Boston Med. &amp. Surg. Jrnl. CLVII. 493/1 "In the Kellgren method, the fingers of the gymnast remain in contact with the skin, and thus they are enabled to really manipulate the parts beneath. (1907)"

(1907.16) Interim Rep. War Office Comm. Provision of Officers 10 "Given a short term of liability, and short periods of recall to the Colours for `refresher' training, many officers..would remain therein. (1907)"

(1907.17) Times 25 Mar. 12/1 "There is no doubt now that the boycott is not meant to stop remaindering at low prices. (1907)"

(1908.1) ChestertonAll Things Considered 47 "His vanity..remains a mere mistake of fact, like that of a man who..thinks he has an infallible system for Monte Carlo. (1908)"

(1908.2) C. ShorterBront&euml.s Life &amp. Lett. I. x. 215 "The Gondaland Chronicles, to which reference is made, must remain a mystery for us. (1908)"

(1908.4) R. BagotA. Cuthbert vii. 77 "If the lady remained at Syracuse for a day or two, so much the better. (1908)"

(1908.5) R. BagotA. Cuthbert xxvi. 339 "Anthony suggested to her that she and his sister should slip away unobserved. He himself would remain half-an-hour longer, and would then follow their example. (1908)"

(1908.6) R. BagotA. Cuthbert v. 43, "I was not thinking of myself, but of you. Do you suppose that I want you to remain unmarried in order to secure my own position?" (1908)"

(1908.7) S. E. WhiteRiverman xvii, "The remainder of the time he spent walking the streets and reading in the club rooms. (1908)"

(1908.8) V. KarapetoffExper. Electr. Engin. xxi. 494 "It only remains..to bring the machine into phase with the voltage at the bus-bars. This is done either by means of properly connected incandescent lamps..or special instruments, so-called synchroscopes. (1908)"

(1908.9) Animal Managem. 241 "The `*chisel' head or sharp portion [of the frost nail] to remain above the [horse-]shoe. (1908)"

(1908.10) Church Times 7 Feb. 173/1 "He gathered into a leather pouch the remains of his cigarettes, and left the room. `What does he do with all those fags?' asked Conway. (1908)"

(1908.11) Daily Chron. 10 Jan. 3/5 "The constabulary were withdrawn, and the processes remained unserved. (1908)"

(1908.12) Jrnl. Inst. Electr. Engineers XLI. 120 "In America the local term remains the same, the junction is called `trunk', and our trunk is called a `toll' or `long-distance' line. (1908)"

(1908.13) Lancet 21 Mar. 899/1 "If pyocyanase came in contact with leucocytes, their plasma was dissolved so that the granules and the nuclei only remained and these were..immobilised. (1908)"

(1908.14) Nature 679/1 "The difference between the ohm and the international ohm remains a matter for experiment. (1908)"

(1908.16) Westm. Gaz. 30 Dec. 8/2 "In spite of the employment of many thousands..on..clearing away the muddy remains of the recent snowstorm, the principal roadways..presented an extraordinary spectacle of mud-heaps, mud-rivers, and mud-banks. (1908)"

(1909.1) A. G. McCallPhysical Properties of Soils 88 "Stir up the soil remaining in the centrifugal tube and allow to stand for about one minute, or until all particles larger than silt (0&rdot.05 [mm.]) have settled. (1909)"

(1909.2) Groom &amp. Balfour tr. Warming's Oecol. Plants ix. lxvii. 257 "In depressions lying within the subglacial tract where snow remains for a long time, one finds characteristic, greasy mud, which sustains a vegetation of its own-&Ouml.ttli's snow-patch flora. (1909)"

(1909.4) J. SwireAnglo-French Horsemanship 25 "The secret of remaining on a horse when he `plays up' is to drop the hands, press the heels down, [etc.]. (1909)"

(1909.5) Cent. Dict. Suppl., "Bet, in faro, a card which is a case, that is, the only one of that denomination remaining in the box: so called because the player cannot be split. (1909)"

(1909.6) Cent. Dict. Suppl., "*After-sound, a subjective sensation of sound which remains after the sound itself has ceased. (1909)"

(1909.7) Daily Chron. 31 Aug. 1/2 "`Raffles' remains a more endeared and far more possible character than the burglaring `Duke'. (1909)"

(1909.8) Daily Chron. 3 Sept. 1/1 "The weather improved, but there still remained a light *life-sapping wind which drove despair to its lowest recess. (1909)"

(1909.9) Jrnl. Amer. Chem. Soc. XXXI. 351 (heading, ) "The ordinary transference number (TH) for concentrated solutions, as obtained by the Hittorf method, is erroneous in cases where the ions are hydrated, since it is calculated on the assumption that the water remains stationary during the passage of the current. (1909)"

(1909.10) N.Y. Times 17 July 3/5 "Mary Mallon, known to fame as `Typhoid Mary',..must remain at Riverside Hospital. (1909)"

(1910.1) A. A. Brill tr. Freud's Three Contrib. to Sexual Theory ii. 39 "Sexual activity remains throughout the whole duration of the latency period until the reinforced breaking through of the sexual impulse in puberty. (1910)"

(1910.2) F. W. HodgeHandbk. Amer. Indians II. 226/2 "The Penobscot took an active part in all the wars on the New England frontier up to 1749, when they made a treaty of peace, and have remained quiet ever since. (1910)"

(1910.3) H. R. MillDict. Geogr. Terms in L. D. Stamp Gloss. Geogr. Terms (1961) 426 "Somma, originally, the rampart remaining from the old crater of Vesuvius and forming an arc around one side of the new one. The name is sometimes extended to similar formations in other volcanoes. (1910)"

(1910.4) L. HooperHand-Loom Weaving i. ii. 37 "It only remains to take the group of eight threads below and over peg A in order to finish the first portee, as such a collection of threads warped in one round is called. (1910)"

(1910.5) S. E. WhiteRules of Game xii. 66 "The remains of the forest, overgrown with scrub oak and popple thickets, pushed down to the right-of-way. (1910)"

(1910.6) Whitehead &amp. RussellPrincipia Math. I. iii. 69 "Incomplete..symbols have what may be called a `definition in use'... We define the use of &udtr.2, but &udtr.2 by itself remains without meaning. (1910)"

(1910.8) Dublin Rev. Oct. 344 "Human nature..is likely to remain still exactly the same. Those who believe it to be travelling towards moral supermanhood have obviously not studied it. (1910)"

(1910.9) Encycl. Brit. XI. 644/2 "Wernerianism..rapidly declined in influence, while Plutonism came steadily to the front, where it has ever since remained. (1910)"

(1910.10) Encycl. Brit. XIII. 503/1 "Whilst the Arya was thus a dvi-ja, or twice-born, the Sudra remained unregenerate during his lifetime. (1910)"

(1910.11) Encycl. Brit. XI. 904/2 "The remainder [of the wine produced in the department of Gers] is chiefly manufactured into brandy, known by the name of Armagnac, second only to Cognac in reputation. (1910)"

(1910.12) Encycl. Brit. (ed. 11) II. 538/2 "We..perform the subtractions independently, and then regroup the results as the remainder. (1910)"

(1910.13) Encycl. Brit. VII. 714/2 "The remaining radiations at the two poles of the spindle are the `astral rays'. (1910)"

(1910.14) Jrnl. R. Soc. Arts LVIII. 260/2 "There remained a mere film..like silver foil... That is, I believe, a fair example of the so-called `solid silver' sold in our swell shops, with the aid of much electric light and many bowing salesmen. (1910)"

(1910.15) Library I. 46 "The plays in question were printed in the years with which they are dated and unsold copies..remaindered in 1619. (1910)"

(1911.2) A. O. Curle in Proc. Soc. Antiquaries Scotl. 11 Dec. 89 "To the galleried structure the name `wag' in former times was evidently applied and still remains in use, though now transferred from the structure to the place or site, e.g. `Wag-more rig', `Wag-burn' and `the Wag'. (1911)"

(1911.3) C. N. Bennett et al. Handbk. Kinematogr. i. iv. 28 "In the form of lens attached to kinematograph cameras, alteration of diaphragm is effected by the movement of a ring or pin on the lens mount which causes the `iris' inside to open and close like the iris of a cat's eye, except that the hole in the middle always remains circular in shape. (1911)"

(1911.4) D. S. HulfishCycl. Motion-Pict. Work II. 137 "The remaining proportion of light may be supplied by lighting a partial battery of lamps. (1911)"

(1911.8) V. E. Shelford in Biol. Bull. 147 "It is of course recognized that within rather uncertain limits the mores of a morphological species remain, in a general way, the same throughout its geographic range. (1911)"

(1911.9) W. W. FowlerRelig. Exper. Rom. People xii. 287 "The old State religion remained, but in stunted form, and with paralysed vitality. (1911)"

(1911.11) W. C. Mackenzie in N. Munro Home Life of Highlanders 38 "In some of the outlying districts..there are phases of life that have apparently remained unaltered since the Middle Ages. They are typified by the `black houses', many of which are still to be found in the Long Island. (1911)"

(1911.12) Daily News 2 Oct. 3/1 "The holdings are ruthlessly rearranged among the tenants who remain-a process called `striping'. (1911)"

(1911.13) Encycl. Brit. XXIII. 393/1 "The remainder of the *road space is formed as an earthen track. (1911)"

(1911.21) Times 9 Aug. 6/1 "The strong, able-bodied ones go off to the Colonies and only the weedlings remain. (1911)"

(1911.22) I. HaySafety Match iii. 48 "For a moment he was silent-free-wheeling, so to speak, over the pulverised remains of Mr. Winch. (1911)"

(1912.1) A. J. B. WavellMod. Pilgrim in Mecca viii. 152 "The `Ihram'..remains till the day of the festival, when the `Kiswah', that is the covering itself, is changed. (1912)"

(1912.2) ChestertonManalive 234 "Dr. Cyrus Pym had remained for an unprecedented time with his eyes closed and his thumb and finger in the air. It almost seemed as if he had been `struck so', as the nurses say. (1912)"

(1912.3) H. N. DicksonClimate &amp. Weather iii. 77 "At heights greater than about nine miles the temperature..remains nearly constant at about &min.70&deg.F at all levels... In this `isothermal layer'..there would seem to be..little movement. (1912)"

(1912.4) J. JoyceLet. 23 Aug. (1966) II. 311 "Tomorrow I must pawn my watch and chain in order to remain on a little longer. (1912)"

(1912.5) S. C. RoyMundas &amp. their Country i. 16 "The site of the original home of the Mundas will perhaps ever remain hidden from view in the mist of ages. (1912)"

(1912.6) W. H. Lang tr. Strasburger's Text-bk. Bot. (ed. 4) 89 "A barrel-shaped figure, the phragmoplast, is formed, which either separates entirely from the developing daughter nuclei, or remains in connection with them by means of a peripheral sheath. (1912)"

(1912.10) Chambers's Jrnl. Dec. 773/2 "It is pitiful to see the rows of discarded books in circulating libraries and remainder-shops. (1912)"

(1912.11) Jrnl. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia XV. 525 "The most general results of increased temperature are:... (4) Formation of numerous *karyomeres from these scattered chromosomes; indeed by slight increase of temperature almost every chromosome may be caused to remain distinct from every other one, and to give rise to a separate chromosomal vesicle. (1912)"

(1912.12) Min. Proc. Inst. Civil Engin. CLXXXVIII. i. 10 "There only remained the investigation of the effects of the high speed on the *fatigue strength of the specimens. (1912)"

(1912.13) Trans. Amer. Surg. Assoc. XIII. 159 "Carcinoma of the rectum and rectosigmoid remains a local condition until a late stage. (1912)"

(1913.1) E. HatschekPhysics &amp. Chem. of Colloids v. 41 "If a solution of sodium silicate..is decomposed by a slight excess of hydrochloric acid, and the mixture is dialysed until the free acid and the sodium chloride have been removed, there remains in the dialyser a perfectly clear colourless sol of silicic acid. (1913)"

(1913.2) E. H. MinnsScythians &amp. Greeks vii. 134 "The first finds were made about the village of Tripolje on the Dn&ecirc.pr forty miles below Kiev, whence this is called the Tripolje culture. The remains consist of so-called `areas' (ploshch&aacu.dka). (1913)"

(1913.4) V. B. LewesOil Fuel 71 "The oil remaining in the retort, called `Ostatki' in the Russian distilleries and `Residuum' in America, is used for fuel. (1913)"

(1913.5) Bull. Geol. Soc. Amer. XXIV. 206 "In an early stage of the new cycle the fault&dubh.line scarp will be highest near the incised valleys of transverse streams, and it may remain for a time undeveloped on the interfluves. (1913)"

(1913.6) Encycl. Relig. &amp. Ethics VI. 44/1 "The central rite of the great Pongol festival of S. India consists in cooking new rice, some of which is offered to Ganes&acu.a, the remainder being eaten by the family. (1913)"

(1913.7) Jrnl. Chartered Insurance Inst. XVI. 146 "He can discontinue premiums as before, and remain assured for the full amount for a limited period. This, you will perceive, is a Paid-up Term policy, and is known as Extended Assurance. (1913)"

(1913.8) Petroleum World June 272/1 "The remaining three columns respectively give their colour, density at 20&deg. C. and viscosity at 20&deg. in Redwood units. (1913)"

(1913.9) Rep. Brit. Assoc. Adv. Sci. 205 "The district is rich in prehistoric remains, including some hut circles. (1913)"

(1914.2) J. CollingsColon. Rur. Brit. I. vi. 113 "The remainder of the children whose after-school career was traced went into industrial or commercial occupations. (1914)"

(1914.3) Ld. TollemacheCroquet xviii. 110 "The attempt is sometimes made in the second break to `Peel' your first ball through its remaining Hoops during the course of your second break. (1914)"

(1914.4) Pollard &amp. HeggemMud-laden Fluid Applied to Well Drilling (U.S. Bur. of Mines Techn. Paper No. 66) 7 "In this paper the term `*mud-laden fluid' is applied to a mixture of water with any clay which will remain suspended in water for a considerable time. (1914)"

(1914.5) Brit. Mus. Guide Processes of Engraving 52 "A maculature is another form of weak impression. A copper plate needs to be inked between each impression. Sometimes a second impression is taken from the plate before re-inking, as a means of extracting the remainder of the ink from the lines. This is called a maculature. (1914)"

(1914.6) Chem. Abstr. VIII. 2247 "Flushing out the vapors remaining in the still with steam so that they will not mix with the vapors from the next run. (1914)"

(1914.7) Q. Jrnl. Geol. Soc. LXX. p. xcviii, "A bed was found, which yielded the incised drawings..as well as numerous mammalian remains and flint-implements; and this is regarded as of Aurignacian age. Immediately below the last-mentioned bed a deposit of sand..was penetrated..and this deposit, also referred to the Aurignacian, was found to contain an enormous number of bones. (1914)"

(1914.8) Railway Mag. Nov. 401/1 "It was..agreed that all existing contracts and conditions of service shall remain in operation,..(signed) for General Managers' Committee:-..for *N.U.R.:-..for A.S.L.E.&amp.F.:-. (1914)"

(1915.1) C. G. GreyTales Flying Services 35 "One of them [sc. seaplanes]..had just alighted astern, and was `taxying' along to pick up her own boom when somehow the last remaining bomb `came unput'-as one who was present said-and fell into the water. (1915)"

(1915.2) D. H. LawrenceRainbow vii. 187 "Containing birth and death, potential with all the noise and transitation of life, the cathedral remained hushed. (1915)"

(1915.3) F. HopwoodLet. 20 May in M. Gilbert Winston S. Churchill (1972) III. Compan. ii. 920 "It is plain that a First Sea Lord remains in office until the new Patent appointing his successor is passed the Seal &amp. he is `read in' at the Board. (1915)"

(1915.4) W. M. BaylissPrinc. Gen. Physiol., x. 304 "Supersaturated solutions are cases of `trigger action'. They remain indefinitely as such until infected with a crystal, and then the rate of crystallisation is independent of the amount of crystals added. (1915)"

(1915.5) Aeroplane 10 Mar. 222 "The battery signaller sent a message: `Battery out of action for an hour, remain aloft awaiting orders.' Back came the reply with remarkable promptitude: `Submitted; that this machine is not fitted with sky-hooks.' " (1915)"

(1915.9) Lancet 17 Apr. 812/2 "The term *trench-foot appears to us to be the most suitable for a condition which has practically only been met with in those who have had to remain for long periods in the trenches. (1915)"

(1916.1) C. C. GarrardElectr. Switch &amp. Controlling Gear ii. 54 "The remaining considerations which determine the rupturing capacity of an oil circuit breaker apart from size, robustness, quickness of break and, of course, the quality of the oil used, are length and number of breaks under oil, or speaking generally the capability of the switch to bring a large quantity of oil into intimate contact with the arc so as to smother the same as effectively as possible. (1916)"

(1916.2) C. J. DennisSongs Sentimental Bloke 118 "To lose or do in the block, to become flustered; excited; angry; to lose confidence. To keep the block, to remain calm, dispassionate. (1916)"

(1916.4) G. A. Miller et al. Theory &amp. Applic. Finite Groups xv. 308 "For any prime p, it is shown in the theory of numbers that there exists a primitive root g of p such that 1, g, g2, .., gp&min.2, when divided by p, give in some order the remainders 1, 2, 3, .., p &min. 1. (1916)"

(1916.5) H. F. ClelandGeol. vi. 242 "Radiolarian ooze and red clay shade into each other in certain places, the deposit being called radiolarian ooze when these organic remains constitute 25 per cent. of the mass. (1916)"

(1916.6) H. EtheridgeBar-Lock Typewriter Manual, 45 "On releasing the Tab. key the carriage remains at the number on the scale where the first stop has been fixed. (1916)"

(1916.7) M. A. S. RiachAir-Screws ix. 113 "The value of (V) is zero, and the machine remains stationary. This is the condition already established for `hovering' flight. (1916)"

(1916.9) T. C. Cantrill et al. Geol. S. Wales Coalfield xii. xii. 116 "It is probable that the circular or elliptical pockets of coal known as `slatches' or `slashes' are the remains of short closed synclinal masses of coal abnormally swollen out by the squeezing-down of the two sides of the syncline. (1916)"

(1916.11) Anzac Book 138 "And it came to pass that while they yet warmed their hands there was heard a mighty crash, and of the `Gyppies' that remained were picked up seven stretchers full. (1916)"

(1916.12) Anzac Bk. 138 "And it came to pass that while they yet warmed their hands there was heard a mighty crash, and of the `Gyppies' that remained were picked up seven stretchers full. (1916)"

(1916.13) Blackw. Mag. Jan. 59/1 "Troops would not always remain in the open to be whiffed out of existence by shrapnel. (1916)"

(1916.14) Jrnl. Amer. Chem. Soc. XXXVIII. 778 "It has been generally assumed that what is known as a bivalent element must be tied by two bonds to another element or elements, or remain with an `unsaturated valence'. (1916)"

(1917.1) D. Hecht in C. E. Long tr. Jung's Analytical Psychology (ed. 2) xiv. 424 "By these means she remains at an infantile homosexual stage, which serves her as a defence. (1917)"

(1917.2) M. WebbGone to Earth xiii. 118 "People remained in a sessile state over tea for a long time. (1917)"

(1917.3) Encycl. Sinica 545/1 "Confucius believed in the power of human nature to remain upright if properly taught; Lao Tz&ucirc. believed it would keep straight if left to itself. This is his famous doctrine of Wu-wei, (Inaction or Nonassertion). (1917)"

(1917.4) N.Y. Times 25 Feb. 4/1 "Two thousand persons participated in the coronation, which required two full days to `take', despite the fact that it remains on the screen only three minutes. (1917)"

(1917.5) Phil. Mag. XXXIV. 205 "When the regression of the first variable on the remaining n&min.1 variables is linear, the multiple correlation coefficient measures the dependence of the first variable on the others. (1917)"

(1917.6) Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. III. 621 "The viability of the three sex-linked dominants was..already known; the remaining six dominants were tested. In all, it was found that three of the nine are not lethal, one..is semi-lethal, and five..are completely lethal when homozygous. (1917)"

(1917.7) Times 30 May 7/4 "What will be the attitude of those portions of Greece..if they remain wheatless. (1917)"

(1918.2) E. S. FarrowDict. Mil. Terms 414 "Occupation Army, an army that remains in possession of a newly conquered country, retaining it as a kind of hostage, until peace is signed and the war indemnity paid. (1918)"

(1918.4) E. S. FarrowDict. Mil. Terms 235 "Flare, an unsteady, dazzling light used as an illumination and in signaling: in a&euml.ronautics, a guide for landing. Flare lights, lights used in combination with obstacles, either protected or screened, to prevent the enemy removing them. They are screened in rear so that the defenders may remain in shadow. Flare pistol, a large pistol, which looks like a sawed-off shot&dubh.gun, from which flares are fired. (1918)"

(1918.8) Policeman's Monthly Oct. 16/3 "In answer to this, it was learned that fifty-eight began by smoking opium..eight ate morphine, three ate `yen shee', the ashes of opium, and the remaining cases started by using cocaine and laudanum, or eating opium. (1918)"

(1918.9) Policeman's Monthly June 30/1 "There still remain twilight zones in most centers of population. (1918)"

(1919.1) E. W. DeanMotor Gasoline Properties (U.S. Bur. Mines Techn. Paper No. 214) 25 "If the liquid remains unchanged in color and if the sulphur film is bright yellow or only slightly discolored.., the test shall be reported negative and the gasoline considered `sweet'. (1919)"

(1919.2) G. WhaleBrit. Airships 160 "The remaining two engines are carried in a small streamline car situated amidships. (1919)"

(1919.3) H. DreyfusBrit. Pat. 160,225, "The solvent action on the cellulose acetate increases so that this is more and more dissolved and plastified until..only very little volatile diluent remains. (1919)"

(1919.4) J. E. H. ThomsonMem. T. Dunlop ii. 19 "All that remained of the Rectory or Pedagogy, that in pre-Reformation days represented the later University. (1919)"

(1919.5) J. BuchanMr. Standfast iii. 63 "By the middle of 1915 most [enemy spies]..had been gathered in. But there remained loose ends, and..somebody was very busy combining these ends into a net. (1919)"

(1919.6) MenckenAmer. Lang. iii. 93 "A great many of them [sc. Chinese words] have remained California localisms, among them such verbs as to yen (to desire strongly, as a Chinaman desires opium). (1919)"

(1919.7) MenckenAmer. Lang. v. 151 "Several years ago -heimer had a great vogue in slang, and was rapidly done to death. But wiseheimer remains in colloquial use as a facetious synonym for smart-aleck, and after awhile it may gradually acquire dignity. (1919)"

(1919.8) R. M. Barclay tr. Kraepelin's Dementia Praecox &amp. Paraphrenia 253 "Delusions and hallucinations of quite the same kind, as we see them in paranoid cases, occur also in most of the remaining forms of dementia pr&ae.aeig;cox. (1919)"

(1919.9) R. H. GoddardMethod of reaching Extreme Altitudes (Smithsonian Misc. Coll. LXXI. (No. 2) 1 "The problem was to determine the minimum initial mass of an ideal rocket necessary, in order that on continuous loss of mass, a final mass of one pound would remain, at any desired altitude. (1919)"

(1919.10) T. S. EliotHippopotamus in Poems, "The True Church remains below Wrapt in the old miasmal mist. (1919)"

(1919.12) Eng. Hist. Rev. July 283 "St. Helena..the chief remaining watering-place on the direct route between the Comoros and home waters. (1919)"

(1919.13) tr. Lenin's State &amp. Revol. i. 21 "Engels speaks here of the destruction of the capitalist State by the proletarian revolution, while the words about its withering away refer to the remains of a proletarian State after the Socialist revolution. (1919)"

(1920.1) A. S. EddingtonSpace, Time &amp. Gravitation iii. 59 "It reminds us of the mathematicians' transfinite number Aleph; you can subtract any number you like from it and it still remains the same. (1920)"

(1920.2) L. DoncasterIntrod. Study Cytol. vii. 95 "In the spermatocyte, as the cell enlarges, the mitochondrial bodies increase in size... In the young spermatid they unite to form a fairly compact mass near the nucleus at the side of the cell at which the tail will grow out. [Note] This mitochondrial mass (`mitosome') constitutes the `Nebenkern' of some authors, but as the word has been used to designate the remains of the division-spindle.., the `idiozome'..and other cell-structures, it is now dropping out of use. (1920)"

(1920.4) Chambers's Jrnl. Apr. 220/1 "Only one small tin of corned beef remained in his *blanket-pack. (1920)"

(1920.5) Flight XII. 1194/2 "Below 15&deg. the aerofoil remains at rest, but at high angles it auto-rotates, slowly at first, and then more quickly. (1920)"

(1920.6) Glasgow Herald 1 May 6 "The clan is no more..; but the piobmohr [sic] remains.., and in its music there may be heard..the romance, and the tragedy, and the beauty of the story of the Scottish Highlands. (1920)"

(1920.7) N.Y. Times 24 May 20 "The photoplay, however, remains simply a picturized reproduction of the stage play. (1920)"

(1920.8) Nat. Food Jrnl. II. 595/1 "The Clauses..prohibiting the addition to milk of colouring matter or water, the reconstitution of milk [etc.]..will remain in force. (1920)"

(1921.1) A. HolmesPetrogr. Meth. 126 "When a transparent mineral fragment is rotated between crossed nicols various phenomena may be observed... If the object remains dark, and is therefore isotropic, the total extinction indicates an amorphous or cubic (isometric) mineral in an unstrained condition, or a basal section of a uniaxial mineral (tetragonal, hexagonal, or trigonal). (1921)"

(1921.8) W. RadcliffeFishing from Earliest Times xxv. 326 "A picture of a bronze mummy-case containing remains of a small Lates. (1921)"

(1921.9) Ann. Bot. XXXV. 185 "The remainder of the tetraploids, the whole of the pentaploids and hexaploids, showed a partial reduction involving fourteen or twenty-eight chromosomes. (1921)"

(1921.10) Blackw. Mag. June 705/2 "A few of the political officers remain in the new capacity of Adviser to an Arab Mutassarif. (1921)"

(1921.11) Blackw. Mag. Apr. 535/2 "She rejoined the remainder of the passengers.., having in her hands a doped handkerchief. (1921)"

(1921.12) Discovery Feb. 48/1 "The pest..remains in existence until potatoes are again cropped in the field. (1921)"

(1921.13) Daily Colonist (Victoria, B.C.) 5 Apr. 7/2 "The seas were breaking so high over the bar here yesterday and today that some off-shore shipping was compelled to remain outside. (1921)"

(1921.14) Daily Colonist (Victoria, B.C.) 7 Apr. 8/1 "The strike situation between the meat packers and their employees remained unchanged this morning. (1921)"

(1921.15) Glasgow Herald 17 Jan. 11 "It remains to be seen how the Persian Court will take to the idea of Sovietisation. (1921)"

(1921.16) Geogr. Jrnl. LVIII. 308 "The snow falls, and when it melts, the spare gravel that remains on the clay substratum has taken upon itself the same system of polygons..which we see in Polar lands. (1921)"

(1921.17) Jrnl. Chem. Soc. CXIX. 454 "Experimental results have always been obtained by shaking a certain volume of a solution of known strength with a known amount of sorbing material such as charcoal, and analysing a sample of the remaining solution. (1921)"

(1921.18) Proc. Nat. Acad. Sci. VII. 200 "In the 8 remaining prophase or metaphase figures, not all the trivalent chromosomes could be distinguished from the bivalents or univalents into which they had divided, or from which they were composed. (1921)"

(1922.1) Bjerknes &amp. Solberg in Geofysiske Publikationer III. i. 4 "The remaining part of the warm sector near the centre also disappears fairly soon, so that the cyclone on the ground only consists of cold air... For this type we have chosen the name `occluded cyclones'. (1922)"

(1922.10) R. T. FranksGynecol. &amp. Obstetr. Path. 75 "In some instances..in which the menstruation is delayed or remains in abeyance, although ovulation occurs, the prepuberty and the puberty stage cannot be differentiated clinically. (1922)"

(1922.12) Beaver Jan. 33/1 "We remained at Mountain House until *open water in the spring. (1922)"

(1922.13) Brain XLV. 44 "Myelocele... Here.. segments of the medullary folds have remained open and the neural ectoderm lies exposed on the surface of the body as a ribbon of delicate tissue down the mid-dorsal line. (1922)"

(1922.14) Daily Mail 4 Dec. 9 "The Provisional Government will be out of office by Wednesday, and the Oireachtas, as the Free State Parliament will be known, will come into being, consisting of Seanad Eireann (Upper House), comprised of 60 senators, 30 of whom will be nominated by the Government, and the remainder by the elected deputies of the people, who will sit as a Lower House, under the name of Dail Eireann. (1922)"

(1922.15) Encycl. Brit. XXX. 36/2 "Connecting-rods of rotary and radial engines consist usually of one *master rod, ball or roller-bearinged, with the big-end enlarged to form circular lugs to secure wrist pins carrying the plain or auxiliary type of rod of the remaining cylinders. (1922)"

(1922.16) Encycl. Brit. XXXII. 491/2 "The fullerphone is a telegraph instrument, the essential point of which is the changing at the receiving end of a steady current into an intermittent current of audible frequency, while at the same time the current in the line remains steady. (1922)"

(1922.17) Encycl. Brit. XXXII. 1027/2 "The remainder of the plate voltage is created by the rectification by the valve of the speech currents induced in the secondary circuit. (1922)"

(1922.18) Flight XIV. 620/2 "How machines will fare..remains to be seen. The southern slopes are not nearly so steep, and the extent to which they give soar&dubh.ability is at present a matter for speculation. (1922)"

(1922.20) Nation 18 Nov. 271/1 "The Bonar Law Government..remains in power, but probably on a minority vote..This deprives it of the right to pursue the standpat Toryism on which it made the elections. (1922)"

(1923.1) A. L. KroeberAnthropol. xv. 472 "Whenever the origin of a people remains obscure, be they Neandertals, Alpines, Sumerians,..or what not, some one propounds the convenient hypothesis of deriving them from this vast interior land [sc. central Asia]. (1923)"

(1923.3) A. W. Ward in Jrnl. Amer. Dental Assoc. X. 478/2 "In order to avoid infection, pain, sensitiveness of the roots..I have devised a quick setting pack. This pack is mixed like cement and flowed between the teeth and all over the exposed surface. The tissues regenerate under the pack, which is allowed to remain four to six days after the operation. (1923)"

(1923.5) H. G. Baynes tr. Jung's Psychol. Types v. 230 "The religion of the last two thousand years..has, thereby, created an atmosphere which remains wholly uninfluenced by any intellectual disavowal. (1923)"

(1923.6) R. J. E. TiddyMummers' Play 172, "I old father scrump with a bell on my rump... A man..kicked a hump up on to my shoulder and there remains the hump now. (1923)"

(1923.7) Brit. Jrnl. Photogr. LXX. 350 "The remaining factor in contact printing is the distance between the light and the negative... The question of printing distance operates equally in projection printing. (1923)"

(1923.8) Bull. Geol. Soc. Amer. XXXIV. 167 "Geanticlines and orogens may remain as dry lands or may sink into the depths of the oceans. (1923)"

(1923.9) Dental Items of Interest XLV. 5 "The remaining portion of a vital pulp following excision, or partial pulpectomy, will be destroyed. (1923)"

(1923.10) Eastern Buddhist (Japan) I. 13 (heading II. 341 "It remained for the Chinese Zen Buddhists to invent their own methods according to their own needs and insight. (1923)"

(1923.11) Harmsworth Househ. Encycl. II. 993/3 "Columbarium. This word is used..for the building in which the urns containing the remains of cremated persons are placed. (1923)"

(1923.12) Johns Hopkins Hosp. Bull. XXXIV. 339/1 "All the cells in the preparation kept in the dark had reversed within two days, whereas the controls remained sickled for a period of three days to one month. (1923)"

(1923.13) N.Y. Times 15 July vi. 1/6 "The method of the comedy team remains more or less unvaried. The team is composed, in the first place, of a comedian and a `straight' man. (1923)"

(1923.14) N.Y. Times 15 July vi. 1/6 "The method of the comedy team remains more or less unvaried. The team is composed, in the first place, of a comedian and a `straight' man. (1923)"

(1923.15) N. &amp. Q. 18 Aug. 133/1 "The stone pies appear to be the fossilized remains of certain echinoderms kindred to the North American sand-dollar. (1923)"

(1923.16) Q. Jrnl. Microsc. Sci. LXVII. 156 "In the symplasmatic zone of the diploplasma are to be found remains of maternal nuclei, maternal blood corpuscles and various granules. (1923)"

(1923.17) Spectator 19 May 837/2 "It remains to state as clearly as may be what means lie ready to develop a *property-owning democracy. (1923)"

(1923.18) Victoria Hist. Co. Berkshire III. 56/2 "The borough of Windsor..was from the first, as it has since remained, a royal borough, owning no overlord but the King. (1923)"

(1924.1) C. J. H. TolleyMod. Golfer 64 "Thousands to-day would not be playing the game if the `gutty' ball remained the official ball of to-day. (1924)"

(1924.2) C. CramptonCane Work 13 "Back trac, an additional border worked with the remaining ends of a three-rod plain border. (1924)"

(1924.4) G. B. SternTents of Israel vii. 97 "Danny remained at his crank school in Hampstead. (1924)"

(1924.5) Jeffries &amp. ArcherSci. of Metals ix. 323 "There are different solid phases in equilibrium with the melt above and below the peritectic temperature. During the peritectic reaction there are three phases (two solid and one liquid) in equilibrium, so that the temperature must remain constant until at least one of the phases disappears. (1924)"

(1924.6) J. Riviere et al. tr. Freud's Coll. Papers II. xxi. 253 "There always remains as a common feature in the &ae.aeig;tiology both of the psychoneuroses and the psychoses the factor of frustration. (1924)"

(1924.7) J. T. GwynnIndian Politics iii. 18 "The Moderate or Co-operating party is to-day so unpopular that it takes some strength of mind to remain a Co-operator. (1924)"

(1924.8) J. G. A. Skerl tr. Wegener's Orig. Continents &amp. Oceans xiii. 192 "Thus the Pang&ae.aeig;a of the Carboniferous era had already an anterior margin (America), which became folded (Precordilleras)..; and a posterior margin (Asia), from which littoral ranges and fragments became detached, and remained fast in the sima of the Pacific as groups of islands. (1924)"

(1924.9) J. A. Thompson in Glasgow Herald 19 July 4 "When we put aside these parasitic diseases and modificational diseases, there remain those that may be called constitutional. (1924)"

(1924.10) J. A. ThomsonSci. Old &amp. New xxi. 116 "The selection is marked by the bird's remaining near the chosen spot and giving the *nesting-call to the mate. (1924)"

(1924.11) O. LodgeAtoms &amp. Rays ii. 33 "The possibility of building up still more complex, and probably still more unstable, elements..remains a subject for future discovery. (1924)"

(1924.12) R. BeaumontCarpets &amp. Rugs vii. 262 "The *loop pile may wear flat or bare, but it remains part of the carpet structure. (1924)"

(1924.13) T. WoodhouseJacquards &amp. Harness iv. 107 "Before describing the remaining parts of the machine, it will..be best to indicate how the design is read. (1924)"

(1924.14) W. MuirCaliphate 433 "Of the Umeiyads, the Syrians remained the last support. (1924)"

(1924.15) WodehouseUkridge x. 256 "What they put in that stuff..I don't know, but the fact remains that the bird almost instantly became perfectly pie-eyed. (1924)"

(1924.16) Geol. Mag. 454 "The remaining class in Glinka's scheme is only of limited interest for western European pedologists. (1924)"

(1924.17) Nature 20 Dec. 895/1 "Whereas in the male the ratio abdomen-breadth: carapace-breadth remained constant, in the female it increased continuously... P&eacu.zard (1918) has styled the growth of such an organ heterogonic. (1924)"

(1925.1) A. HuxleyAlong Road i. 19 "The Citro&euml.n went into second and remained there; slowly we puffed up the long ascent. (1925)"

(1925.2) A. D. ImmsGen. Textbk. Ent. iii. 365 "The latter issue from the galls and are divisible into winged gallicol&ae.aeig; migrantes (migrantes), which fly to the intermediate host, and gallicol&ae.aeig; non-migrantes which remain on the spruce and give rise to further fundatrices. (1925)"

(1925.4) E. F. NortonFight for Everest 1924 57 "No. 1 party was to..remain based there for the purpose of getting the next camp on to the North Col. (1925)"

(1925.5) F. Scott FitzgeraldGt. Gatsby vii. 157 "Jordan and I tried to go, but Tom and Gatsby insisted..that we remain-as though..it would be a privilege to partake vicariously of their emotions. (1925)"

(1925.6) Fraser &amp. GibbonsSoldier &amp. Sailor Words 158 "Mopping-up, the term for the work allotted to special parties of men appointed to follow close in the track of advancing `waves' of troops, in order to explore and clear the enemy lines and dug-outs of men remaining behind... The Mopping-up method was first adopted at the Battle of Arras in February, 1917. (1925)"

(1925.8) J. Riviere tr. Freud's Papers on Metapsychol. in Coll. Papers IV. 16 "One mode of thought-activity was split off; it was kept free from reality-testing and remained subordinated to the pleasure-principle alone. (1925)"

(1925.9) Russell &amp. Saunders in Astrophysical Jrnl. LXI. 61 "Their remaining properties may be explained on the assumption that the two displaced electrons have fixed orbital momenta, L1, L2, of the amount indicated by Land&eacu., but that the inclination of their planes is quantized, so that the resultant angular momentum K may have any geometrically permissible value in the series 1/2, 3/2, [etc.]. (1925)"

(1925.10) T. N. GoddardHandbk. Sierra Leone iii. 57 "Initiation into the Porro society takes place in youth. While boys remain in the Porro bush they are taught the arts and crafts of their tribe. (1925)"

(1925.11) T. DreiserAmer. Trag. (1926) I. ii. vi. 195 "He decided to remain- later sitting down to dinner with a small group of milltown store and factory employees. (1925)"

(1925.12) W. DeepingSorrell &amp. Son v. &sect.1 "Sorrell remained by the car. He liked the colour of it, and the compact brightness of the dash-board. (1925)"

(1926.2) C. N. BennettPhotogravure 121 "Paper makers, like drapers, have their remnants, though the name for them in the paper making industry is `remainders'. (1926)"

(1926.3) D. G. HogarthKings of Hittites 8 "Have any remains been revealed which manifestly are Cappadocian Hattic, wholly or in part? " (1926)"

(1926.4) D. C. MillerSci. of Mus. Sounds vii. 216 "Many writers on the subject have held that the quality of a vowel, as well as that of a musical instrument, is characterized by a particular series of overtones accompanying a given fundamental, the pitches of the overtones varying with that of the fundamental, so that the ratios remain constant; this is the relative-pitch theory. (1926)"

(1926.6) Tansley &amp. ChippStudy of Vegetation vii. 117 "In cold, moist soils poor in mineral salts and acid in reaction..the leaf litter and other plant debris remain on the surface very little changed and often form a thick layer which is called raw humus. (1926)"

(1926.7) Tansley &amp. ChippStudy of Vegetation vii. 116 "With lapse of time not only are calcium carbonate and other soluble salts leached from the surface soil..but the finer insoluble particles tend also to be mechanically carried down, so that the coarser particles alone remain in the surface layers, which are then said to be `eluviated' as well as `leached'. (1926)"

(1926.9) Amer. Speech I. 437/1 "When an act proves to be such a wow that it is forced to respond to encore after encore and the remainder of the acts on the program must wait until the audience will allow them to go on, it is said to `stop the show cold'. (1926)"

(1926.10) Brit. Gaz. 12 May 1/4 "Every man who does his duty by the country and remains at work or returns to work during the present crisis will be protected by the State from loss of trade union benefits. (1926)"

(1926.11) Bantu Studies II. 219 "Comparison has been made mainly with the Boskopoid remains from Zitzikama reported upon..during the last two years, and with the descriptions of the original Boskop remains. (1926)"

(1926.12) Daily Colonist (Victoria, B.C.) 2 July 5/3 "The remainder of the morning was occupied by the younger members of the party in playing soft ball and other less strenuous games. (1926)"

(1926.13) Daily Colonist (Victoria, B.C.) 7 July 3/5 "The disappearance of Charles Olson from his trap line on the headwaters of the Parsnip River in Northern British Columbia remains as much a mystery as when it was first reported. (1926)"

(1926.14) Work-Whitehead Auction Bridge Bull. Jan. 118/2, "I will give the three cards remaining in each of the four hands to show how South was squeezed by the lead of the Queen of Clubs. (1926)"

(1927.1) A. HuxleyProper Studies 190 "The ratio of solitaries to sociables will remain much as it is. (1927)"

(1927.2) C. SpearmanAbilities of Man vi. 75 "The `general factor'..denoted by the letter g..is so named because, although varying freely from individual to individual, it remains the same for any one individual in respect of all the correlated abilities. (1927)"

(1927.3) Carr-Saunders &amp. JonesSoc. Struct. Eng. &amp. Wales 150 "The applicant may at the discretion of the Ministry of Labour receive `extended' benefit for the remainder of the benefit year. (1927)"

(1927.4) C. ConnollyLet. 7 Mar. in Romantic Friendship (1975) 281 "There remain consolations, such as finding places that aren't spoilt and not being surprised by their destruction into the..oldie worldie type. (1927)"

(1927.5) E. ThompsonIndian Day xiv. 111 "A colony of water hyacinth had rooted itself..where deep water still remained. (1927)"

(1927.6) E. G. RichardsonSound x. 236 "The lower pitch limit is about 16 vibrations per second. Slow vibrations..remain unperceived as tones if their rate of pulsation falls below this limit... Such `infra-sonic' waves have been extensively studied by Esclangon. (1927)"

(1927.7) E. V. GordonIntrod. Old Norse 254 "The e of verbs of the fourth and fifth conjs. remained unfractured. (1927)"

(1927.8) G. BradfordGloss. Sea Terms 45/2 "Cruising radius is calculated with two points of view-one, the vessel's capacity in miles without refueling; the other, her capacity to remain at sea expressed in days running at normal speed. (1927)"

(1927.9) G. B. ShawDoctors' Delusions (1932) 135 "Shallow petulances and tu quoques which have remained part of the vivisector's stock of debating points ever since. (1927)"

(1927.10) I. DuncanMy Life (1928) viii. 78 "Another, even greater impression, that has remained with me all my life was the `Rodin Pavillon'. (1927)"

(1927.11) J. GalsworthyCastles in Spain 169 "A true work of art remains beautiful and living, though an ebb tide of fashion may leave it for the moment high and dry on the beach. (1927)"

(1927.12) T. WoodhouseArtificial Silk 95 "In the manufacture of stockings..two machines are used... One of these machines, termed the `legger', knits the upper and longer part of the stocking, whereas the other machine, termed the `footer', knits the remainder of the stocking. (1927)"

(1927.13) T. Burrow in Brit. Jrnl. Med. Psychol. 202 "In a comprehensive view of our human phylum there remains no other conclusion than that the social mind..comprises a systematization of social images. (1927)"

(1927.14) T. WoodhouseArtificial Silk 95 "In the manufacture of stockings on such frames two machines are used... One of these machines, termed the `legger', knits the upper and longer part of the stocking, whereas the other machine, termed the `footer', knits the remainder of the stocking. (1927)"

(1927.15) T. WoodhouseArtificial Silk 67 "It is quite possible that all the remaining hanks have already been leased. (1927)"

(1927.16) W. E. CollinsonContemp. Eng. 58 "Those who have been in close contact with the infected patient may have to remain in quarantine or dry-dock. (1927)"

(1927.17) Ann. Rep. Progr. Chem. XXIV. 115 "In the same way that in mobile cation tautomerism the hydrogen ion forms a more or less stable covalent link with (negative) carbon, whereas the sodium ion tends to remain in the electro&dubh.valent state (thus giving rise to the phenomena of pseudo&dubh.acidity), so..the hydroxide ion tends to co-ordinate with positive carbon, whereas very stable anions like chloride..tend to retain their ionic condition..: thus arises the phenomenon of *pseudo-basicity. (1927)"

(1927.18) Amer. Mercury May 33/1 "The corpse is not a corpse nor does it wear a shroud. It is the body, or the remains;..and the garment in which it is wrapped, when there is one aside from ordinary clothing, is a neglig&eacu.e. (1927)"

(1927.19) Amer. Speech II. 242/1 "Only in small country papers does one find `patent insides'. The country editor frequently buys four pages of his paper already printed, filled with `features', fiction, and advertising. He has only to fill the four remaining pages with local news and advertising. (1927)"

(1927.21) Chambers's Jrnl. June 370/1 "The bungalow..remained in charge of a Nepali. (1927)"

(1927.22) Daily Tel. 11 May 3/4 "The rest would be dug up after the present season, and rubber planted in its stead, as the hevea trees remaining were widely spaced. (1927)"

(1927.23) Glasgow Herald 28 Apr. 15 "A new dictionary of air terms has been compiled... So far as England is concerned, the word `dirigible' will disappear and only `airship' remain. (1927)"

(1927.24) Jrnl. Philos. XXIV. 9 "The given is for science a continual challenge, always remaining `*pre-analytical', in the sense of never condemning as bootless the task of more searching analysis. (1927)"

(1927.25) Mod. Philol. Nov. 227 "New locutions..constantly replace old ones, which viewed post factum, would have been unintelligible, had they remained in use. (1927)"

(1927.26) Melody Maker June 609/3 "The cymbal must be `open' when it is struck and must remain `open' for practically the full length of the beat being played, only being choked out just before the next beat. (1927)"

(1927.27) Melody Maker Aug. 777/1 "Al Payne should have been leader, but the necessary *labour permits could not be obtained, and the band remains in America. (1927)"

(1927.28) Observer 3 Apr. 29/1 "[He] let loose a whole flock of `birdies' and `eagles' with which he captured the remainder of the holes. (1927)"

(1927.29) Q. Jrnl. Geol. Soc. LXXXIII. 197 "The plant-remains are entombed in sage-green arenaceous shales, which are intercalated among the typical sage-green sandstones of the Senni Beds of this locality. (1927)"

(1927.30) Sunday Times 13 Mar. 8/3 "He [sc. Otway] still remains the most Racinian of all our poets. (1927)"

(1928.1) A. EvansPalace of Minos II. ii. 774 "The remains of the remarkable painted relief of the personage wearing a plumed lily crown and collar, in whom we may with good reason recognize one of the actual Priest-Kings of Knossos. (1928)"

(1928.2) C. DawsonAge of Gods i. 11 "There is reason to think that this race [sc. Boskop Man] was the ancestor of the modern South African Hottentot and Bushman, for the remains of an intermediate type-the vanished race of Strandloopers-has been discovered and all three types agree in certain cranial characteristics. In size of brain, however, there is a steady diminution from the 1,700 c.c. or more of Boskop through the Strandlooper skulls. (1928)"

(1928.3) C. W. Dodge tr. G&auml.umann's Compar. Morphol. Fungi i. 1 "The product of fertilization is called a zygote as long as it remains unicellular; it develops into a diplont which forms gonotoconts (organs in which meiosis occurs). (1928)"

(1928.4) J. T. MacCurdyComm. Princ. Psychol. &amp. Physiol. 168 " Adrian..found that, in the isolated fibre, the strength of the impulse, once it was set up, remained constant and could not be increased by augmenting the strength of the stimulus. This is known as the all-or-none law of the nerve impulse. (1928)"

(1928.7) Camb. Univ. Cal. 102 "The new Statutes have abolished the practice by which (i) Bachelors in Arts, Law, [etc.]..remained `Bachelors designate' until the last week-day of December... (ii) Masters and Doctors only attained the full degree by `Creation'. (1928)"

(1928.8) Daily Mail 25 July 3/6 "Though the price of Icilma Shampoos remains at 3d., each packet now contains a wonderful Toning Rinse suitable for every shade of hair, which removes all trace of lather, and leaves the hair in a state of exquisite burnished beauty. (1928)"

(1928.9) Daily Express 7 Apr. 5/5 "Drive in the remaining pegs and attach and true up the remaining guylines. (1928)"

(1928.10) Daily Express 10 Dec. 11/1 "York County's early settlers were Germans, and their present-day descendants still remain under the spell of medieval German necromancy. One of their sacred words is `hex', said to be corrupt German for witch. (1928)"

(1928.14) New Statesman 28 July, Finance Suppl. p. vi, "Out of the combined issued capital of &pstlg.16,629,000 the public put up 93 per cent. of the cash required, but received only 21.8 per cent. of the equity-that is the balance of profits remaining after the fixed dividends have been paid on the Preferred capital. (1928)"

(1928.15) Observer 17 June 28/6 "Once in the line for home, Goose Kiss did not remain at the head of affairs, for he compounded rapidly. (1928)"

(1929.1) A. J. VaughanMod. Bookbinding ii. 121 (caption iv. 217 )"Quarter Bound, where the back and some portion of the sides only of the binding consist of one material, and the remainder of the sides of another. (1929)"

(1929.2) A. S. ChandlerHookworm Dis. vii. 287 "Sandground himself, as the result of a light and brief Strongyloides infestation, apparently remained immune for at least 14 months. (1929)"

(1929.4) G. GouldDemocritus 89 "What we want is to preserve the precious gift of shockability while remaining too intelligent to be shocked. (1929)"

(1929.5) H. A. VachellVirgin iii. 55 "June found herself in dry dock, and likely to remain there, when her services were most in demand. (1929)"

(1929.6) J. C. BoseGrowth &amp. Tropic Movements Plants xx. 216 "If the movement be nastic, then the closure or the opening movement will remain the same, whether the organ be held in normal position or upside down. (1929)"

(1929.9) J. A. RatcliffePhysical Princ. Wireless iii. 50 "The oscillating system..is not an electrical circuit, but is a tuning-fork made of `invar' metal, whose frequency remains very constant under all conditions. (1929)"

(1929.10) J. N. FarquharMod. Relig. Movements in India iii. 171 "As in Theosophy, you may be a Ra&mac.dha&mac. Soa&mac.mi and yet remain a Hindu, a Muh&dotbl.ammadan or a Christian... Yet it is definitely stated that the religion is for all, and that outside the Satsan&dotab.g there is no salvation. (1929)"

(1929.11) O. G. S. CrawfordAir-Photography for Archaeologists 3/1 "Inequalities in the surface of the ground produce shadows. All sites where remains are visible on the ground fall into this class. They may be called *shadow-sites. (1929)"

(1929.12) P. MairetAdler's Problems of Neurosis vi. 84 "After having triumphed over him and having had the death-wish granted by fate, he remained still unsatisfied. (1929)"

(1929.13) T. M. NaylorSteam Turbines i. 4 "Combination turbines or disc and drum turbines, as they are often called, are a combination of impulse and reaction types of turbine. The first part of the turbine is impulse, and the remainder of the turbine is reaction, so that this type of turbine might be called impulse-reaction. (1929)"

(1929.16) Aeronautics (H.M.S.O.) 109 "The rigging is so parcelled that it is pulled out gradually, the part already released remaining taut and straight, the whole of the rigging emerging before the commencement of the withdrawal of the body. (1929)"

(1929.17) Bibliographia Genetica V. 234 "In Bacillus coli communis...a biotype was also found having lower motility than the remainder of the clone from which it came. (1929)"

(1929.18) Chicagoan 17 Aug. 22/2 "In this period he [sc. Carl Sandburg] wrote the poetic denunciation of the Rev. Billy Sunday that..remains as the most thorough skinning that the evangelist ever received. (1929)"

(1929.19) Encycl. Brit. IV. 585/1 "Calhoun,..during the remainder of the Jackson regime, was a severe critic of Jacksonianism. (1929)"

(1929.20) Sun (Baltimore) 23 Oct. 1/3 "The President and his immediate party left Cincinnati..aboard the Greenbrier..and three other light craft-*quarter boats, they are called-for the remaining members of the party. (1929)"

(1930.1) A. S. EddingtonRotation of Galaxy 13 "The effect on the apparent angular motion..remains always on the verge of what is detectable observationally. (1930)"

(1930.7) L. DennyAmer. conquers Brit. 9 "That easily inspired hatred of Germany remained as a hang-over in America long after it had been thrown over by the British. (1930)"

(1930.8) L. G. D. AclandEarly Canterbury Runs (ser. 1) v. 109 "Valetta was the last of the old *plains stations to remain anything like its original size. (1930)"

(1930.9) P. AllenCase for E. de Vere as Shakespeare 6, "I remained an orthodox Stratfordian until 1923. (1930)"

(1930.10) Ruark &amp. UreyAtoms, Molecules &amp. Quanta xxi. 722 "When electrons impinge on polycrystalline metal surfaces the fraction scattered at an angle &theta. with the normal to the surface does not decrease uniformly as &theta. increases... The results seemed likely to remain unexplained, until Einstein discussed de Broglie's matter waves, in 1924 and 1925. (1930)"

(1930.11) R. PeeleCompressed Air Plant (ed. 5) xv. 273 "Air lines are tested from time to time by allowing the air at full pressure to remain in the closed transmission circuit long enough to observe the gage pressure. (1930)"

(1930.12) Spier &amp. SapirWishram Ethnography 153 "The Wishram were one of the earliest groups known to explorers of the Columbia River Basin... Only a few Wishram still remain. (1930)"

(1930.13) W. T. HallTextbk. Quantitative Analysis xi. 140 "For practical purposes, a reaction is complete or quantitative, as we often say, when less than 0&rdot.1 mg. remains in solution. (1930)"

(1930.18) Monotype Recorder, XXIX. 39 "The remainder..fail to see the vital necessity for advertising and establishing a creative sales policy. (1930)"

(1930.19) Morning Post 17 June 13/1 "The `metrical structure' of space&dubh.time now adopted by Einstein is based on the assumption that there is a meaning in saying that two short lines are equal in length, that they are parallel, and that the angle between them is not altered when they are moved so as to remain parallel to themselves. (1930)"

(1930.20) Nature 15 Nov. 766 "A few were odd twins who had a brother or sister at school, and the remainder were either siblings of twins, or pairs of siblings unconnected with twins. (1930)"

(1930.22) Times Lit. Suppl. 4 Sept. 691/1 "The rest of the Turks remained farmers..and thereby escaped the contamination of the Levantinized Ottomanism. (1930)"

(1930.23) E. QueenFrench Powder Mystery p. xiv, "Without the stool-pigeon a huge percentage of felonies would remain unsolved... Our problem is to find a `stoolie' who will part with the tip. (1930)"

(1931.1) A. N&aacu.daiPlasticity xxxviii. 259 "Stresses of this kind, remaining after partial plastic flow, may be called residual stresses. (1931)"

(1931.2) A. U. DilleyOriental Rugs &amp. Carpets vi. 146 "The oldest group of rugs remaining to us of the weavings of the Ottoman Turks..are the fifteenth-century products now handsomely called Holbein rugs in compliment to Hans Holbein the Younger. (1931)"

(1931.3) Buck &amp. AnthonyBring 'em back Alive 297 "For several seconds we remained deadlocked, the animal making a perfect bedlam of the mess-room with his cries of rage. (1931)"

(1931.4) Coker &amp. FilonTreat. Photo-Elasticity iii. 248 "The integrated tint remains the same over the whole of this locus, and it is for this reason that such lines are called lines of equal tint or isochromatic lines. (1931)"

(1931.5) D. L. SayersFive Red Herrings xv. 167 " `I formed the opinion..that Mr. Gowan had..not departed from Kirkcudbright on the Monday evening..but that he had remained concealed in his own house.'.. `Curiouser and curiouser,' said Wimsey. (1931)"

(1931.6) E. MidgleyTechnical Terms Textile Trade I. 10 "The cloth is woven in a white or undyed condition and *piece-dyed black for wool, so that the cotton fibres remain their natural colour. (1931)"

(1931.7) Hoffert &amp. ClaxtonMotor Benzole viii. 225 "The function of a modern *stripping still is to remove the remaining benzole from the hot oil leaving the preheater. (1931)"

(1931.8) H. G. WellsWork, Wealth &amp. Happiness of Mankind (1932) xi. 540 "The only remaining physical differences between man and woman are becoming horizontal, i.e., differences between individuals in the same class, and not vertical differences, in which all women are put below all men, or vice versa. (1931)"

(1931.9) J. de la CiervaWings of Tomorrow vii. 102, "I supposed that it was preferable to keep the blades from coning, so that they would remain in a horizontal position while in flight. (1931)"

(1931.10) L. H. MorrisonAmer. Diesel Engines v. 129 "The explosion of these lighter parts of the fuel provides the propellant whereby the remainder of the fuel is injected into the engine cylinder in a finely atomized condition. (1931)"

(1931.11) W. C. AlleeAnimal Aggregations i. 15 "Homotypical associations consist of members of the same species which have arisen either sexually or asexually, which may have remained together because they are the offspring of the same parent, or which may have become accidentally associated together although of different parentage. (1931)"

(1931.17) Times 27 Feb. 16/5 "Referring to people in the administrative grade who did not `pull their weight', Sir Alfred Woodgate said that assistant principals who had been twice passed over for promotion to principals were a menace to the office and should not be allowed to remain. (1931)"

(1931.18) Times Lit. Suppl. 10 Sept. 688/2 "The unsold sheets of a published book are re-issued with a cancel title or a new preface, or in a remainder binding. (1931)"

(1932.1) A. J. FairbankHandwriting Man. Introd., "Of the problems arising in the schools today.., one..is how to adapt the handwriting which has been named `print-script'..so that there may remain in the revised model nothing to hinder the tempo at which an adult writes. (1932)"

(1932.5) J. G. ScottBurma &amp. Beyond i. 16 "The Khm&ecirc.r went, or were pushed, farther east,..but the Mo&mac.n remained behind, and came to be known to the early merchant adventurers as Peguans. (1932)"

(1932.6) M. Eastman tr. Trotsky's Hist. Russian Rev. I. xv. 303 "`Our slogan..is pressure upon the Provisional Government..to induce all the warring countries to open immediate negotiations..and until then every man remains at his fighting post!' Both the idea and its formulation are those of the defensists. (1932)"

(1932.7) R. A. KnoxBroadcast Minds ii. 20 (heading 21 )"We are all omniscientists now, at least in ambition... It only remains that we should pride ourselves on knowing something about everything. (1932)"

(1932.8) Stiles &amp. Walsh tr. Castelfranchi's Rec. Adv. Atomic Physics II. v. 167 "The light energy..always remains concentrated in the form of `light quants', or grains, the magnitude of which depends solely on the colour. (1932)"

(1932.9) W. H. Emmons et al. Geol. vi. 133 "As the swirling water back of the falls loosens the soft, shaley formation it removes it piecemeal and undermines the capping limestone, until finally it remains as an inadequately supported overhanging ledge from which large masses of rock plunge into the pool at the bottom of the falls. This process of undercutting is termed sapping. (1932)"

(1932.10) Discovery Oct. 331/1 "There was no suggestion of `hunting' and the image remained exactly central in the [television] screen for the whole half hour. (1932)"

(1932.11) John o' London's Weekly 25 June 428 "He told me he had bought them when they were remaindered by publishers, at 9d. a copy. (1932)"

(1932.12) Physical Rev. XL. 406 "In solving the wave mechanical perturbation problem the distance between the interacting structures has been treated as a fixed parameter. Then *quantum dynamical reasoning has been abandoned, and the remainder of the problem has been solved by the method of classical statistics. (1932)"

(1932.13) Proc. R. Soc. A. CXXXVI. 65 "There remained the possibility..that the effect was a manifestation of the Silsbee effect, in which the current through the super-conductor produces, by its own magnetic field, a depression of the critical temperature. (1932)"

(1932.15) Times 29 Sept. 15/3 "The Budget had been balanced on paper, but it remained to be seen what the actual result would be at the end of the financial year. The outturn proved the soundness of the balancing. (1932)"

(1932.16) Times 12 Feb. 11/1 "The significance of this unique *group-burial must remain a mystery. (1932)"

(1932.17) S. WoodShades Prison House xxii. 340 "An investigation brought to light the remains of the woman and her children, and Mr. Burrows was now booked to play lead at a neck-tie party, shortly to be convened. He walked to and fro with the death guards. (1932)"

(1933.1) Blunden &amp. NormanWe'll shift our Ground 16 "It remained only to add the shriek-marks and to discover a heroine. (1933)"

(1933.2) D. J. MartinIntrod. Thermodynamics for Chemists xiii. 315 "The isobaric heat of adsorption corresponds to the heat of a reaction in a condensed system, the amount adsorbed changes while the pressure remains practically constant. (1933)"

(1933.3) E. &amp. C. Paul tr. Stalin's Leninism II. 206 "Why is the peasantry described [by Lenin] as the last capitalist class? Because of the two main classes of which our society is composed, the peasantry is a class whose economy is based on private property and small commodity production. Because the peasantry, as long as it remains a peasantry, living by small commodity production, will throw up capitalists from its ranks. (1933)"

(1933.4) E. K. ChambersEng. Folk-Play 223 "He [sc. Dionysus] remains primarily a fertility-god, with the bull, and perhaps the goat, and the phallus as his attributes. (1933)"

(1933.5) H. B. PhillipsVector Anal. x. 217 "A linear equation satisfied by dyads will remain valid if each dyad is replaced by the dot or cross product of its two vectors. (1933)"

(1933.6) J. BuchanPrince of Captivity i. iv. 125 "We've got to see that our Miltons don't remain mute and inglorious, but above all that our Hampdens are not left to rot on a village green. (1933)"

(1933.7) L. BloomfieldLanguage viii. 138 "When the phonology of a language has been established, there remains the task of telling what meanings are attached to the several phonetic forms. This phase of the description is semantics. It is ordinarily divided into two parts, grammar and lexicon. (1933)"

(1933.11) Amer. Jrnl. Ophthalm. XVI. 612/1 "From 1856..until the present, the question of a retinopathic entity due to diabetes has remained unsettled. (1933)"

(1933.12) Burlington Mag. May 248/2 "The great problem as to whether the science of art really is a science in the sense that the word is used in relation to natural science remains, however, unsolved. (1933)"

(1933.13) Brit. Birds XXVI. 363 "The elementary co-operative services..a national field centre which can collaborate with other national field centres overseas,-still remain to be provided. (1933)"

(1933.14) Geogr. Jrnl. LXXXI. 462 "A further problem remains, far more serious in the case of zoogeography than with phytogeography. Can the essentials be put..without assuming a knowledge of taxonomy beyond the reach of the average geographer? " (1933)"

(1933.15) Jrnl. R. Anthrop. Inst. LXIII. 403 "The remainder, which includes the opisthion, is missing. (1933)"

(1933.16) Mind XLII. 41 "Each postulate functions in limiting the ranges of the variables in such a manner that any change is one postulate..involves a reciprocal change in its other parts, which change causes it to remain analytic or tautological. (1933)"

(1933.17) Times Lit. Suppl. 29 June 433/2 "No records remain to us of the early Centenaries, but their nature can be safely deduced from that of the Lullian cult, which was practised for hundreds of years both in Majorca and on the mainland. (1933)"

(1933.18) Schofield &amp. Blair in Proc. R. Soc. A. CXXXIX. 558 "A study was made of the rate of elongation of cylinders of unyeasted dough hung vertically by their upper ends and allowed to extend under the action of gravity... It has been found convenient to mark on the dough cylinders a series of fine parallel lines accurately spaced 1 mm. apart. The marks were made by successive turns of a fine wire wrapped round a frame, which are wetted with enamel, the marks remaining wet long enough to be subsequently printed off on to a strip of duplicator paper... The print (which may be called a *rheogram) is available for whatever analysis appears suitable. (1933)"

(1934.1) A. F. JohnsonType Design 31 "The French `lettre b&acirc.tarde' then passed out of use..but in Germany the Bastarda has remained the national type. (1934)"

(1934.2) A. ToynbeeStudy of Hist. II. 79 "This region remained unhellenized much longer than many places that were far more distant from the Aegean. (1934)"

(1934.3) A. L. AlbertElectr. Communication xi. 282 "It remained for Pupin successfully to solve the difficult problem of loading... His method is known as the series or Pupin system of loading. (1934)"

(1934.7) F. W. CousensDogs &amp. their Managem. v. 83 "When the stud dog is unable to `tie' a bitch, he is unable to remain sufficiently long in position to impregnate the bitch properly. (1934)"

(1934.8) H. H. GowenHist. Religion, xxiii. 347 "When the tenth Guru died the succession was regarded as closed and the Adi Granth remained the sole authority. (1934)"

(1934.9) J. A. SinclairAirships in Peace &amp. War iv. 84, "I had remained inside the control car with only the elevator-man and we both left the ship [sc. a zeppelin]. (1934)"

(1934.10) L. W. SharpIntrod. Cytol. (ed. 3) x. 136 "Of considerable interest are those nuclei in which every chromosome of the telophase group forms an individual vesicle, or karyomere. In some cases the karyomeres may eventually fuse partially or completely, but in others they remain separate although in contact, forming what is virtually a group of small nuclei containing one chromosome each. (1934)"

(1934.11) L. W. SharpIntrod. Cytol. 146 "The limits of the several chromosomes remain visible through this stage [sc. between mitoses] in certain nuclei; in extreme cases the nucleus is virtually a group of separate elementary nuclei, or karyomeres. (1934)"

(1934.12) L. B. AreyDevelopmental Anat. (ed. 3) xv. 414 "The telencephalon consists of three regional parts. One is the corpus striatum... The second division is the rhinencephalon, or archipallium, while the remainder of the hemisphere makes up the neopallium. The last two portions comprise all of the externally visible hemispheres, and together may be called the pallium. (1934)"

(1934.13) L. W. SharpIntrod. Cytol. (ed. 3) iii. 57 "In many nuclei there are at certain stages one or more conspicuous masses of karyotin at several points in the reticulum. Of the many terms applied to these the most suitable seems to be chromocenters... In some cases it has been shown that they represent definite chromosomal regions which remain condensed and highly chromatic... These euchromocenters appear to correspond in part to the `prochromosomes'. (1934)"

(1934.14) Priebsch &amp. CollinsonGerman Lang. ii. i. 86 "A clean cut was made between those dialects which underwent the shift and those which remained unaffected. (1934)"

(1934.15) R. GirgesSchistosomiasis v. ii. 194 "It [sc. bladder irritability] may be mistaken for enlargement of that gland and remain undiagnosed as schistosomial for a considerable period. (1934)"

(1934.16) R. H. LowieIntrod. Cultural Anthropol. xiv. 254 "A clan including only descendants of a single ancestor is a `lineage'. Commonly it includes members of two or more lineages, but the concept remains the same. (1934)"

(1934.17) V. G. ChildeNew Light on Most Anc. East iii. 52 "Remains found at Deir Tasa and other sites on the east bank of the Nile in Middle Egypt..belong to a people who have been termed Tasians. (1934)"

(1934.18) Brit. Med. Jrnl. 21 Apr. 703/2 "The typical reaction to leprolin..when applied to healthy persons in an area free from endemic leprosy, differs from the intracutaneous tuberculin reaction in remaining for some days negative or doubtful. (1934)"

(1934.19) Bulletin (Sydney) 16 May 20/2 "The plain turkey, or lesser bustard, one of Australia's finest gamebirds, is reported to be fading out in one of its few remaining strongholds-the great plains of Western Queensland. (1934)"

(1934.20) Down Beat Aug. 4/2 "Oscar Eiler remains on cello... Hunter Kahler replaced George Frewit on piano... Milt. Chalifoux is still on drums, as is Ralph Mazza on guitar and violin. (1934)"

(1934.21) Encycl. Islam IV. 1015/2 "Muhammad frequently discusses the question why mankind consists of a plurality of ummas and has not remained a unit. (1934)"

(1934.22) Evening News 21 June 1/1 "Whatever chance England may or may not have, it will be a better one if there are two or three `quickeys' in the side in any of the remaining Tests. (1934)"

(1934.23) Punch 7 Mar. 280/2 "Lady Placidia was a confirmed burbler, and if at times she is in danger of exceeding her burbling allowance, she remains entirely lovable and amusing. (1934)"

(1934.24) Times Lit. Suppl. 1 Nov. 758/3 "Whether this represents a real ability to synthesize the amino-acid for all purposes, or simply a power to use dietary phenylalanine, remains an open question. (1934)"

(1934.25) Times 22 Aug. 11/3 "A popular dodge at present is to add the word `situation' or `position' to a noun; by this means apparently it has been discovered that the most pregnant meanings can be expressed with the least effort. The `coal situation' remains unchanged; the `herring position' is grave. (1934)"

(1935.2) Bongiorno &amp. Livingston tr. Pareto's Mind &amp. Society I. i. 29 "In pure economics my hypothesis of `ophelimity'..remains experimental so long as inferences from it are held subject to verification on the facts. (1935)"

(1935.3) Condon &amp. ShortleyTheory of Atomic Spectra iii. 165 "If the atom is at a certain moment in a symmetric state it will always remain in a symmetric state. (1935)"

(1935.4) C. EllisChem. Synthetic Resins I. xxviii. 612 "Avoidance of precuring during drying is essential if the molding properties of the resin are to remain unimpaired. (1935)"

(1935.5) Huxley &amp. HaddonWe Europeans v. 161 "Evolutionary branches may..unite again after they have diverged and then either rebranch or remain united. (1935)"

(1935.6) J. N. FriendText-bk. Physical Chem. 81 "As the solvent and catalyst molecules remain virtually constant in amount, many reactions that really are polymolecular are found to conform to the requirements of the monomolecular law. (1935)"

(1935.7) L. L. SnyderFrom Bismarck to Hitler viii. 81 "Only in their outer forms will Japan and other `bearers of civilization' remain Asiatic; inwardly they will become Aryanized. (1935)"

(1935.9) M. SchubigerRole of Intonation in Spoken Eng. 2 "Word-order can remain unaltered, and then the different intonation, the rising instead of the falling tune, is the sole bearer of the interrogative relation. (1935)"

(1935.10) W. FortescuePerfume from Provence 93 "What more amusing than to watch the pompous Monsieur Jeannot slip on a piece of banana skin and skid into a heap of oranges, some of which scatter under the stalls and are swiftly prigged by alert urchins, while other marketers roller-skate on the remainder? " (1935)"

(1935.11) Amer. Speech X. 236/1 "A contributor testifies that in part of Pennsylvania, in college use, a sleep-over is a permission to stay away from church and remain in bed on Sunday morning. (1935)"

(1935.12) Burlington Mag. June 272/2 "The question of the connexion between the carpet patterns and the wall-decoration remains difficult enough. (1935)"

(1935.13) Chem. Abstr. XXIX. 147 "The remaining compds. of the orcinol group of Zopf have, in addn. to the depside linkage, a diphenyl ether linkage between the ortho OH groups with the consequent formation of a closed-ring structure. These compds. have been termed depsidones. (1935)"

(1935.15) Forestry IX. 43 "Raw humus is characterized by its excessive accumulation (slow decomposition), expandibility, and frequently by the presence of some structural remains of plants... [It is] characterized also by an extremely low base content. (1935)"

(1935.16) Mind XLIV. 105 "There is a record of posthumously published remains and an interesting section on spuria. (1935)"

(1935.17) Publ. Carnegie Inst. Washington No. 458. 97 "The general morphological features of the Pel&eacu.an summit are those of an ancient crater wall, remaining in place on all sides but one. (1935)"

(1935.19) W. M. RyburnSchool Organization 278-80 "Kabaddi... 3. Each team consists of nine players... 5. The members of each team remain in their respective semi-circles... 10. A player scores a point for his team if he succeeds in getting back to his semicircle after touching some opponent (with the hand only) or after pushing some opponent out of his semicircle provided that he holds his breath all the time. He will say that word `kabaddi' over and over to show that he is holding his breath... An attempt by a player to touch an opponent is known as a kabaddi. (1935)"

(1936.1) A. W. ClaphamRomanesque Archit. i. 5 "Of all the various structures referred to or described by Isidore of Seville..the surviving remains are almost nil. (1936)"

(1936.2) D. McCowanAnimals Canad. Rockies xv. 134 "When a muskrat skin has been tanned and the coarse outer hair removed the remaining soft silky undercoat is known to furriers as Hudson seal. (1936)"

(1936.4) E. Blom et al. tr. Einstein's Short Hist. Mus. 5 "In China the development from the non-semitonal to the seven-note scale is certainly traceable, even though the old pentatonic always remained the foundation of its music. (1936)"

(1936.5) G. B. ShawMillionairess 117 "There remained the clauses of the Versailles Treaty by which Germany was to be kept in a condition of permanent, decisive, and humiliating military inferiority to the other Powers. (1936)"

(1936.6) H. L. CampbellMetal Castings iii. 53 "Slush castings are produced by pouring the low-melting alloys of lead, antimony, and zinc into metal molds and, after a short interval, slushing out the metal which remains in a liquid state. (1936)"

(1936.8) M. AllisEng. Prelude xxiv. 176 "London remains the great metropolis, but those of the Midlands give an impression of giantism London lacks. (1936)"

(1936.9) R. Croft-CookeDarts vii. 44 "Of all the lesser-known games which can be played on a dart-board, there is none which combines such fascinating elements as Shanghai. And it remains exciting till the very last throw. (1936)"

(1936.10) R. CampbellMithraic Emblems 89 "A spread-winged ph&oe.nix from its ash The Cross remained against the sky. (1936)"

(1936.12) Discovery Nov. 355/2 "The development of newer industries is vital to the recovery of our distressed areas, which remain the one black spot in the otherwise remarkable position of Great Britain. (1936)"

(1936.13) Discovery Nov. 355/2 "The development of newer industries is vital to the recovery of our distressed areas, which remain the one black spot in the otherwise remarkable position of Great Britain. (1936)"

(1936.14) Jrnl. R. Aeronaut. Soc. XL. 191 "The radiated field pattern should therefore remain constant from day to day. There was no evidence whatsoever that atmospheric conditions had any effect on the *field patterns. (1936)"

(1936.15) N.Y. Times 30 Jan. 7/6, "1000 workers of the Firestone Tire and Rubber Company remained idle in a `sit down' protest. (1936)"

(1936.20) Yale Rev. XXV. 288 "Other steps essential to a well-rounded career service remain to be taken... The prospect of permanent undersecretaryships for career men needs to be realized. (1936)"

(1936.21) M. InnesDeath at President's Lodging ix. 164 "Appleby had brought out his notebook-not without a certain diffidence over the remains of the Dean's elegant and *un&dubh.policemanly luncheon. (1936)"

(1937.1) A. ChristieDumb Witness vii. 68 "Though an attractive specimen of what the guidebook calls Early Perp. it [sc. a church] had been so conscientiously restored in Victorian vandal days that little of interest remained. (1937)"

(1937.3) Best &amp. TaylorPhysiol. Basis Med. Pract. lxiii. 1418 "The laminated cortex, which in man constitutes the remaining eleven-twelfths [of the cortical area] and in animals is a much smaller fraction of the whole, is called the isocortex. (1937)"

(1937.5) F. BorkenauSpanish Cockpit iii. 232 "The anxious question `Will they come back to-night?' remained and racked the nerves of the Valencians. (1937)"

(1937.6) I. C. C. TchaperoffMan. Radiol. Diagnosis iv. 167 "The emphysematous area remains transparent in the radiograph of full expiration, whereas the normal areas become more opaque on expiration. (1937)"

(1937.7) M. CovarrubiasIsland of Bali v. 108 "The sat&eacu. can be made of pork or chicken, but turtle remains the favourite of the Balinese of Den Pasar. (1937)"

(1937.8) R. I. AaronJohn Locke ii. iii. 121 "These accounts would have been the same if Locke had never adopted the representationalist position... Though nominally Locke remains representationalist in his explanation of the knowledge we have of our minds, actually he proceeds as if we know ourselves and our operations directly. (1937)"

(1937.9) R. E. Grim et al. in Amer. Mineralogist XXII. 816 "There remains only the alternative of giving a new name to the mica occurring in argillaceous sediments, and the term illite, taken from the State of Illinois, is here proposed. It is not proposed as a specific mineral name, but as a general term for the clay mineral constituent of argillaceous sediments belonging to the mica group. (1937)"

(1937.10) WodehouseLord Emsworth &amp. Others ii. 96 "Can I count on your co-operation?.. Sit in, and I shall be able to marry the girl I adore. Refuse to do your bit, and I drift through the remainder of my life a soured, blighted bachelor. (1937)"

(1937.11) Wooldridge &amp. MorganPhysical Basis Geogr. xiii. 177 "If the active deepening of the valleys is continued after the stage of mature dissection, the ridge-crests will remain sharp. (1937)"

(1937.12) Amer. Speech XII. 100 "The public is..not so accustomed to stand by organist or pianist, an artist who remains on call for emergency work. (1937)"

(1937.13) Bull. Amer. Assoc. Petroleum Geologists XXI. 1079 "A study of wildcat drilling in the Gulf Coast Plains during 1935 and 1936 indicates that between 7 and 11 per cent of all such holes opened new oil or gas pools, the remaining 93-89 per cent having been dry. These figures speak eloquently of the risk involved in wildcat drilling. (1937)"

(1937.14) Discovery Oct. 277/2 "Since the reaction thrust, acting from the extreme rear of the plane, is in no way different from the pull of the aero engine in its nose, and remains in fixed relation to the aeroplane axis, stability and *flight-control are not interfered with. (1937)"

(1937.15) Hansard Commons 4 June 1307, "I undertake, if the House will allow the remaining Regulations to be passed now, to amend No 95 immediately, and the notification of the Amendment will, of course, be subject to a Prayer, just as the Regulations themselves are. (1937)"

(1937.16) Jrnl. Arch&ae.aeig;ol. Assoc. I. 249 "Switzerland, which was once rich in representations of the Dances of Death, has suffered grievous losses. All that remains are a few..fragments in Museums. The earliest of these-the Klingental Totentanz at Basle-..was destroyed..about 1850. (1937)"